Prime minister announces end to borrowing cap for local authorities

Theresa May speaks at the Conservative Party Conference  in Birmingham

Theresa May speaks at the 2018 Conservative Party Conference in Birmingham

Prime minister Theresa May has signalled the start of a new era of council-house building in England by announcing an end to borrowing rules that stop local authorities using a key fund to deliver new homes.

In a measure to boost housebuilding that had gone untrailed, May used her speech to this year鈥檚 Conservative Party conference in Birmingham to announce the move that councils have long called for 鈥 using the revenue from their existing social housing to invest in new stock.

The prime minister鈥檚 announcement is a recognition that the only time in the past 50 years when the nation has delivered the , council homes have contributed a significant proportion of the count.

Speaking to party members at Birmingham鈥檚 International Conference Centre this afternoon, May said the time had come to let councils invest properly in delivering new homes as they had done previously.

鈥淭here鈥檚 a government cap on how much they can borrow against their Housing Revenue Account assets to fund new developments,鈥 she said.

鈥淪olving the housing crisis is the biggest domestic policy challenge of our generation. It doesn鈥檛 make sense to stop councils from playing their part in solving it.

鈥淪o today I can announce that we are scrapping that cap. We will help you get on the housing ladder and we will build the homes this country needs.鈥

May did not say when the lifting of the cap would be effective from. However a social housing funding pledge that she announced last month involved money that would not be available until 2022.

Dujardin Mews, Ponders End, north London

Award-winning council housing: Dujardin Mews, in Ponders End, north London, by Karakusevic Carson Architects with Maccreanor Lavington

Lobby group the Local Government Association welcomed May鈥檚 announcment and architects with a keen interest in social housing are likey to follow suit.

Last month Conservative peer and LGA chairman Gary Porter rubbished May鈥檚 pledge of additional funding of 拢2bn for social housing 鈥 as part of a fund councils and housing associations could bid for to receive from 2022  鈥  as an inadequate measure to deal with the nation鈥檚 housing crisis.

鈥淗omes for affordable and social rent are desperately needed across the country now, not in 2022, and the measures announced fail to provide the funding certainty councils also need to play a leading role in solving our housing crisis,鈥 he said.

Porter stressed that councils were 鈥渉amstrung by Treasury restrictions鈥 which prevented them from borrowing against their existing housing stock 鈥 the HRA restriction May referred to in her speech today.

Responding to May鈥檚 latest announcement, Porter said it was 鈥渇antastic鈥 that the government had heard the LGA鈥檚 argument that councils must be part of the solution to our chronic housing shortage.

鈥淲e look forward to working with councils and the government to build those good-quality affordable new homes and infrastructure that everyone in our communities need,鈥 he said.

鈥淥ur national housing shortage is one of the most pressing issues we face and it is clear that only an increase of all types of housing 鈥 including those for affordable or social rent 鈥 will solve the housing crisis.

鈥淭he last time this country built homes at the scale that we need now was in the 1970s when councils built more than 40% of them.

鈥淐ouncils were trusted to get on and build homes that their communities needed, and they delivered, and it is great that they are being given the chance to do so again.鈥

One motivation for the introduction of the cap on councils borrowing to build new homes was the inclusion of that borrowing on official government borrowing statistics.