The Labour leader鈥檚 ideas on land-banking aren鈥檛 the answer to delivering homes in a recession
鈥淲e鈥檒l say to private developers we can鈥檛 just sit on land: either use the land or lose the land, that is what the next Labour government will do.
We鈥檒l say to local authorities that they have a right to grow, we鈥檒l identify new towns and garden cities and we鈥檒l have an aim that at the end of the parliament Britain will be building 200,000 homes a year, more than at any time in a generation.
That鈥檚 how we make Britain better than this.鈥
鈥 Ed Miliband
There鈥檚 an obvious flaw in this approach, advanced by the Labour leader at his party conference speech yesterday: it isn鈥檛 developers, necessarily, sitting on the land. Many sites with the benefit of planning permission remain with the original landowner, in part because the owner invested to get the permission but got caught out by market decline and has been unable to sell to a developer. Taking the land off the owner who has invested thousands of pounds to secure planning permission and then found him or herself powerless to move the land on to developers is hardly a fair response and, without adequate compensation, is likely to reduce rather than increase private endeavours to secure planning permission.
Public investment in housing is necessary if we鈥檙e to return to the sort of building rates required
Moreover, assuming the land can be taken and at a fair price, what exactly is going to happen with it? Some element of public investment in housing is necessary if we鈥檙e to return to the sort of building rates required (200,000 or more dwellings a year), but if the local authorities can鈥檛 fund the new housing and the market isn鈥檛 able to take it up, all that will happen is that the land will sit idle in public hands rather than private hands.
What will be needed is a return to the sort of central government driven investment that brought about the new towns in the period between the 1940s and the1970s. We鈥檒l need heavily funded and properly empowered Development Corporations, able to deal with the planning, financing and resourcing of development. And this will require massive public funding 鈥 certainly something that won鈥檛 be feasible while austerity remains. Ironically, by the time the government could afford such investment, it鈥檚 likely that the private development industry will be seeing levels of market activity that mean land won鈥檛 be sitting idle in the first place.
So public investment, the creation of Development Corporations, and the use of CPO powers may have a role to play in delivering a new era of New Towns 鈥 as they did in the past 鈥 but they鈥檙e not an answer to recessionary problems in housing delivery. The very times when the Government might most need to use powers in the way that Ed Millband describes are the times when the Government could least afford to do so.
Ian Tant is a senior partner at Barton Willmore
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