No government in half a century has built 300,000 homes every year, but that’s what Labour wants to do now
- Written by Alex Lord, Professor, Lever Chair of Urban Planning, University of Liverpool
The election of the Labour government has been accompanied by a renewed appetite to deal with England’s housing crisis. Among the first of its policy initiatives, announced by deputy prime minister Angela Rayner[1], is the reintroduction of a national housing target – 1.5 million new homes over the period of the five-year parliament.
This target is only for England – the other UK nations have devolved powers over their housing totals – and includes privately-built housing as well as “affordable homes”[2].
While the government’s desire to confront this major housing challenge is laudable, achieving its ambitious target requires two major challenges to be overcome: first, identifying the type of new homes that are needed and who will build them; and second, working out where they should be built.
Overseeing five consecutive years in which 300,000+ dwellings per annum (dpa) are completed would be without modern precedent. The last time 300,000 new dpa was achieved was 1969-70 under Labour’s Harold Wilson (see graph).
In 1978-79, the last full year before Margaret Thatcher’s Conservative government came to power, local authorities across England built 93,300 new homes. By 1996-97, the last year of that period of Conservative government, the figure had fallen to 450.
Over the same period, the number of new homes delivered by the private sector remained largely static, ranging from 127,490 in 1978-79 to 121,170 in 1996-97. At no point in the intervening years did the scale of private development replace the loss of council housebuilding. Instead, around 1.3 million council homes were sold over this period through the “right to buy” initiative – effectively transferring public housing stock to private homeowners.
And post-1997, every successive government has failed to oversee the delivery of anything close to the average of 300,000 new homes per annum that the new government has identified is required.
New homes built in England each year since 1969