Headingley’s
continuing housing shortage is
putting the suburb’s (and the Country’s) repute as a nation of homeowners
‘under threat’, as the number of houses being built continues to be woefully
inadequate in meeting the ever demanding needs of the growing population in the
suburb. In fact, I was talking to my parents the other
day at a family get together; the subject of the Headingley Property market
came up. My parents said it used to be that if you went out to work and did the
right thing, you would expect that relatively
quickly over the course of your career you would be buying a house, you would
go on holiday every year, & you would save for a pension. Now things seem to have changed.
Back in the Autumn, George
Osborne, used the Autumn Statement to double the housing budget to £2bn a year from April 2018 in an
attempt to increase supply and deliver 100,000 new homes each year until
2020. The Chancellor also introduced a series of initiatives
to help get first time buyers on the housing ladder, including the contentious
Help to Buy Scheme and extending Right to Buy from not just Council tenants,
but to Housing Association tenants as well.
Now that does
all sound rather good, but the Country is only building 137,490 properties a
year (split down 114,250 built by private builders, 21,560 built by Housing Associations
and a paltry 1,680 council houses). If you look at the graph (courtesy of ONS), you will see nationally, the
last time the country was building 230,000 houses a year was in the 1960’s.
How George is
going to almost double house building overnight, I don’t know, because using
the analogy of a greengrocers; if people want to buy more apples (i.e. houses) in a greengrocers’, giving
them more money (i.e. with the Help to
Buy scheme) when there's not enough apples in the first place doesn't
really help.
Looking at
the Headingley house building figures, in the local authority area as a whole,
only 1,510 properties were built in the last 12 months, split down into 1,350
privately built properties and 140 housing association with only 20 council
houses being built. This
is simply not enough and the shortage of supply has meant Headingley property
values have continued to rise, meaning they are 3.0% higher than 12 months ago,
rising 0.2% in the last month alone.
I was
taught at school that it’s all about supply and demand, this economics game. The demand
for Headingley property has been particularly strong for properties in the good
areas of the suburb and it is my considered opinion that it is likely to
continue this year, driven by growing demand among buyers (both Headingley
homebuyers and Headingley landlords alike). You see Headingley’s economy is quite varied, meaning activity
is expected to remain relatively strong into the early Summer of 2016,
especially as some Headingley buy to let landlords try to complete purchases
ahead of the introduction of new stamp duty rules in April.
... and of
supply, well we have spoken about the lack of new building in the suburb
holding things back, but there is another issue relating to supply. Of the
existing properties already built, the concern is the number of properties on
the market and for sale. The number of properties for sale last month
in Headingley was 253, whilst 18 months ago, that figure was 282 whilst three
and a half years ago it stood at 337… quite a drop!
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