Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
1
New Home Market under the New Policy Agenda
John Stewart HBF Director of Economic Affairs 20 March 2007
2
Presentation Outline Key policy influences Housing demand & supply
Planning reform Environmental sustainability Callcutt Review
3
Key Policy Influences
4
Key policy influences 15 years of economic stability, low interest rates Rapid household growth Climate change
5
15 years of economic stability
Subdued cycle Rising living standards Inflation tamed => low interest rates No major policy mistakes Benign global economic trends Impact on policy, business, home buyers
6
Rapid household growth
Household projections England: 2004-based: 223,000 pa ( ) 2003-based: 209,000 pa ( ) 1996-based: 152,000 pa ( ) Net migration: 33% growth
7
Housing demand Low interest rates Rising living standards
Rapid household growth => Strong housing demand/need
8
Housing supply Total housing completions (England): 1993-2000: flat
2001: 130,000 (historic low) 2006: 160,000 (+23% 2001) Government target: 200,000 pa by 2016 Household growth: 223,000 pa
10
Supply/demand imbalance
Imbalance to continue well into future => Affordability crisis to persist FTBs will struggle Ready supply of young tenants for PRS
11
Planning Reform Response
12
Planning reform response
Barker Reviews Government house building target PPS3 and guidance PGS, Cross-cutting Infrastructure Review
13
Planning reform: housing market perspective
Adequate housing numbers In the right locations Of the right types (house types, mix, densities, parking, design, products)
14
Adequate housing numbers
Closing the 40-60,000 pa gap: Is new planning system up to the job? Will central government enforce – regional assemblies & local authorities Will infrastructure be delivered Early omens!
15
In the right locations…
Pressures not just confined to the south…
17
Of the right types ‘Size, type and affordability’ unresolved…
Prescriptive LA mix policies? Density under PPS3? Parking under PPS3? Context: 46% apartments in 2006
18
Environmental Sustainability Climate Change
19
Government target All new homes zero carbon by 2016
Reduced water consumption Reduced waste Context: 85%+ of new homes are privately built for private buyers
20
Consumer perspective Zero-carbon homes must:
Feel and look like a home – type, density, external and internal design, parking Be comfortable, liveable, healthy - specification Be mortgageable, insurable, hold resale value With reliable, affordable, managed energy supply
21
Consumer perspective As zero-carbon homes developed, must:
Not run too far ahead of home buyers Complement technical with consumer research Learn how to market benefits Speak same language as home buyers
22
Consumer perspective “We cannot experiment on our customers” - most of whom are buyers Warning from failed post-war system-built experiment - on social tenants
23
Callcutt Review
24
Callcutt Review An opportunity to put customers first in the drive for 200,000 zero-carbon, quality homes Big risks if driven by technocrats and environmental enthusiasts (including LAs)
25
New Home Market under the New Policy Agenda
John Stewart HBF Director of Economic Affairs 20 March 2007
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.