Labour plan for 1.5m new homes is not feasible, housebuilding firm says

Labour’s plan to build 1.5m homes during this parliament is not achievable because of a severe skills shortage, an ageing workforce and Brexit, the head of Britain’s largest housebuilding company has said.

The government outlined on Thursday how it would achieve this goal. The proposals within the revised national planning policy framework (NPPF) include individual targets for each planning authority and new rules that will allow for housebuilding on poorer quality green-belt land.

The Barratt Redrow chief executive, David Thomas, when asked by the BBC if there were enough workers to build the extra homes promised by Keir Starmer and Angela Rayner, said: “The short answer is no.”

He added that the government would have to “revolutionise the market, revolutionise planning, revolutionise methods of production” to make their target achievable.

“They’re challenging targets. I think we have to recognise that this is a national crisis,” Thomas said.
The Home Builders Federation (HBF) echoed Thomas’ sentiments.

The HBF told the BBC the UK “does not have a sufficient talent pipeline” of builders to meet Labour’s goal, citing recruitment constraints with poor perception and lack of training within schools, not enough apprenticeships, and the cost of taking on apprentices.

The industry body said the sector had not “attracted” enough recruits in recent years, saying a quarter of tradespeople were aged over 50.

The concerns from within the construction industry have dampened prospects for the prime minister’s construction targets, after he said on 5 December his government would “absolutely” push development through.

Starmer said he wanted to “get the balance right with nature and the environment” but that “a human being wanting to have a house” had to be the top priority.

As well as its commitment to build 1.5m homes, the Labour government intends to make decisions on 150 major infrastructure projects during this parliament.

The updated NPPF commits to a “brownfield first” strategy, with disused sites that have already been developed in the past prioritised for new buildings.

The default answer when a developer seeks to build on brownfield sites will be yes, but the government says these sites will not be enough for the number of homes needed.

Previous post Small boat crossings would be ‘thousands higher’ under the Tories, Yvette Cooper says
Next post Turkey has emerged as a winner in Syria but must now use its influence to help build peace

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *