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Mayor calls for stamp duty devolution

Created on
27 July 2018

  • Data reveals social housing now smallest tenure in London, down from largest in 1980s.
  • Homeownership divide has grown starkly between younger and older Londoners.
  • International cities with more control over their own tax revenues outpace London's housing growth.
  • Sadiq urges Government to devolve stamp duty receipts to City Hall alongside other property taxes so that money can be invested back into building affordable housing.

The Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan, has reiterated calls for stamp duty receipts to be devolved to London to fund much-needed affordable homes, as new figures reveal an alarming rise in housing inequality between older and younger Londoners.



New data released by City Hall shows that home ownership rates among younger Londoners have fallen dramatically since the 1990s, and a lack of social housing means only one-fifth of London households now live in social homes.



The 2018 'Housing in London' report shows how the Right to Buy scheme has seen more than 300,000 homes sold by councils in London since it was introduced in 1980, with just one in five having been replaced. As a result, social housing has gone from being the capital’s largest housing tenure in the 1980s to the lowest in 2017, accounting for just 21 per cent of London’s households. It has also meant the numbers of private rented households with children have more than doubled in a decade, from 140,000 in 2007 to 320,000 in 2017.



London’s overall home ownership rate has also fallen in recent decades - but the data shows stark differences in the trends for different age groups. In 1990, around half of London households headed by a 25-34 year old owned their own home, with around half of the households headed by someone over 65 owning too. But in less than 30 years this story has changed dramatically – the proportion of young people owning their own home has fallen to around a quarter, whilst amongst the over-65s the opposite has been the case, with the proportion having risen to almost three-quarters.



The Mayor currently receives around £0.7bn a year from national Government to invest in affordable housing. City Hall calculations show he would need four times that - around £2.7bn a year - to build the social rented and other genuinely affordable homes that Londoners need. The capital’s rising housing costs now generate £3.4bn in stamp duty receipts, and Sadiq believes this should be devolved to City Hall, alongside other taxes, so that these receipts can be reinvested into building genuinely affordable housing. A major report last year from the London Finance Commission showed that London raises far less of its own funding than similar cities around the world, and recommended that property taxes be devolved to London so that it could invest in new homes and infrastructure.

The Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan, said: “London's housing landscape has worsened dramatically over the past 30 years, and we now risk a whole generation of Londoners being blocked from enjoying the benefits of a good quality, genuinely affordable home. This data shows that accessing social housing or homeownership is now a pipe-dream for too many. London’s rocketing house prices mean we are contributing billions of pounds in stamp duty to the Treasury, when we could be using it to build new social rented and other genuinely affordable homes. Control of stamp duty has been devolved to Scotland and Wales and it’s vital that Ministers devolve it to London too, which has a population larger than Scotland and Wales combined.



“City Hall are doing everything we can to ensure new genuinely affordable homes get built, including our programme dedicated to helping councils build more housing. But the housing crisis facing our city, and in particular young Londoners, is immense. The Government must rise to the scale of the challenge and provide significantly more powers and funding so we can build the homes that Londoners so desperately need.”



The data also highlights how the capital is lagging behind major international cities whose housing growth has outstripped their population growth over the last five years, including Singapore, Tokyo, and Paris*. In contrast, London’s population grew 1.4 per cent a year over the last five years, but its housing growth rate was only 0.8 per cent a year. All of these other cities have far greater control over their tax revenues than London.

Terrie Alafat CBE, Chief Executive of Chartered Institute of Housing said: “This report makes it clear that young people are paying the price for our national failure to build the genuinely affordable homes we so desperately need, particularly in London. We simply cannot go on with the system we have or the implications for future generations will be every bit as significant as the impact of Brexit.

“For many people on lower incomes, social rent is the only truly affordable option – but as we can see from this report, thousands of people are being denied access because of the increasing shortage of social housing. It is vital that the government thinks creatively about how to shift investment so that we can build more of the right homes, in the right places, at the right places.”



The Mayor is doing all he can with the resources and powers at his disposal to build the homes London needs and protect social housing and in 2017/2018, his ‘Homes for Londoners’ programme saw 12,526 genuinely affordable homes started – more than in any year since City Hall took control of housing investment. Crucially this included 2,826 new homes based on social rent levels – up from zero homes for social rent in the pipeline inherited from the previous Mayor.



Sadiq is also working to bring more small sites forward for development, supporting small and medium-size builders; using his £250 million Land Fund to play a more interventionist role in the land market to speed up delivery of new homes; and introducing resident ballots for estate regeneration schemes that include any demolition of social housing.



In addition, he has given a major boost to councils in their plans to get building again with his new Building Council Homes for Londoners programme which will help get 10,000 new council homes underway over the next four years. The programme, which is City Hall’s first specifically dedicated to supporting council housing, is using funds from the £1.67bn Sadiq secured from government in the Spring Statement for genuinely affordable housing in London.



Richard Brown, Research Director at Centre for London said: “As these figures show, the inability of young Londoners to find affordable housing is becoming an increasingly urgent challenge, if London is to be a fair and prosperous city. London boroughs could play a major role delivering the housing the capital needs. But London has one hand tied behind its back. To support and encourage councils to deliver at scale, Government should allow councils to borrow to build and to mix funding more flexibly.

"The Mayor also has very limited powers over taxation, compared to his counterparts in other capital cities. The Government should also devolve stamp duty alongside other property taxes to enable reform, and investment in housing and other infrastructure. The case for greater fiscal devolution has been strengthened in recent years by the transfer of powers over property and income tax powers to the governments of Scotland and Wales. Now is the time for London to get a deal of its own."



ENDS



*Singapore's population grew by 1.6 per cent a year over the last five years and its housing stock by 3.1 per cent; Tokyo's population grew by 0.7 per cent and its housing stock by 1.8 per cent, and Paris's population grew by 0.4 per cent and its housing stock by 0.5 per cent.

Notes to editors

In 1990, more than half (57 per cent) of 25-34 year olds and 49 per cent of over 65s owned their own home in the capital. But in less than 30 years this story has changed dramatically – now, less than a third (28 per cent) of young people own their own home, while 72 per cent of over 65’s are home owners.

 

The 2018 Housing in London report can be read here: https://data.london.gov.uk/dataset/housing-london

To read the London Finance Commission report, visit: https://www.london.gov.uk/what-we-do/business-and-economy/promoting-london/london-finance-commission

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