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Displaying ROOF Blog articles tagged with Government
12/01/2024
With the largest council housebuilding programme for nearly two decades already underway, housing minister John Healey has doubled government cash for new council homes. Mr Healey announced 73 councils covering every region of England will share an extra £122.6m. Councils will match this second round government grant bringing investment in this round to £246m, and total public investment in the programme as a whole to over £500m to build more than 4,000 new council homes for 8,000 people. In a clear break with council houses of the past, Mr Healey also confirmed that many will be new family homes, whilst all will be highly energy efficient and add to the mixed make-up of local neighbourhoods.
11/01/2024
A Conservative government would curb immigration to stop the population of the United Kingdom reaching the forecast 70 million, David Cameron said yesterday. He said net migration to the UK each year should be limited to ‘tens of thousands’ rather than ‘hundreds of thousands’, adding: ‘I’m in favour of immigration, we’ve benefited from immigration, but I think the pressures, particularly on our public services, have been very great.’ The number of people migrating to the UK minus those emigrating was 237,000 in 2007 and 163,000 in 2008.
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08/01/2024
The Bank of England’s monetary policy committee on Thursday voted to keep rates unchanged at 0.5 per cent and to continue with its £200bn quantitative easing programme as further signs of stabilisation emerged across the economy. The decision was widely expected, with the Bank having signalled it intends to make big decisions on monetary policy only when the forecasts in its quarterly inflation report are available. February, therefore, could see the first change in the Bank’s monetary stance since its November decision to increase the scale of quantitative easing –- which has taken the form of purchases mostly of government debt, funded by the creation of money – from £175bn to £200bn. With about £7bn left of that left, most economists expect the Bank to halt the programme, having already slowed the pace from £75bn every three months to £50bn earlier last year to £25bn in November.
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16/12/2023
Anyone who starts work after six months on benefit will be at least £40 a week better off, under a guarantee yesterday by Yvette Cooper, the work and pensions secretary.
Other proposed changes to housing benefit aim to cut some of the highest rents the state pays for out-of-work people, and to reduce the immediate impact on rent payments for people moving into work.
In an employment white paper and housing benefit review, Ms Cooper confirmed a government promise of a job, training or work experience after six months’ unemployment for anyone aged 18 to 24.
Some 100,000 posts will be made available, including police community support officers, work in the NHS and probation service, and constructing a national cycle network.
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16/12/2023
The number of repossessions orders taken out by mortgage lenders rose by three per cent during the third quarter of the year to 13,987, figures from the Financial Services Authority (FSA) have shown.
Despite the increase, the FSA said the number was ‘much in line’ with the average for the year as a whole and six per cent below the figure for the first quarter of the year.
The drop is likely to have been driven by interest rate cuts at the start of the year, which made mortgages more affordable, and increased government help for struggling borrowers.
The FSA said the number of borrowers who had fallen into mortgage arrears of more than 1.5 per cent of their outstanding loan had fallen for the third successive quarter, and at 46,000 was down 10 per cent on the three months between April and June and 30 per cent below the peak in the last three months of 2008.
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10/12/2023
Homeowners facing repossession or struggling to meet mortgage payments after losing their jobs will continue to receive extra support from the government following the pre-Budget report.
The government has said it will freeze the standard interest rate used to calculate its Support for Mortgage Interest (SMI) at 6.08 per cent for a further six months. It said the SMI scheme has benefited around 220,000 homeowners.
From April this year, the government said it would cover the monthly interest due on mortgages of up to £200,000 for borrowers who have been out of work for three months and were having difficulty meeting their payments.
Previously it only offered support to homeowners with mortgages of £100,000 or less.
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04/12/2023
Housebuilders and construction workers have begun a campaign to fight off a new tax crackdown on the building trade, which the industry claims will stifle the sector’s recovery and make it difficult to hit government housing targets.
The Home Builders Federation and the Federation of Master Builders will launch its Stop the Unfair Building Tax campaign today to try to persuade the government to rethink proposals that the industry says will push more workers into the black market.
The Government wants to stamp out false self-employed status in the building industry, which it says costs the Exchequer £350 million a year.
It proposes to collect tax and national insurance contributions from an estimated 300,000 workers who claim self-employed status.
Workers will be deemed employees unless they supply their own materials and equipment, or other people’s labour as well as their own.
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30/11/2023
The government is to offer cash rewards of up to £500 to people who report neighbours they suspect are unlawfully subletting their council home.
Ministers have been told that between 50,000 and 200,000 social rented homes in England are occupied by unauthorised tenants, at a time when waiting lists are full and housing projects have stalled.
They are expected to target 8,000 tenancy cheats in a first wave of investigations this week across 145 local authorities after a trawl of council records by the Audit Commission.
There is a growing crisis as demand for social housing has soared during the recession.
About 1.8m households are on waiting lists in England, while just 60,000 social homes have been built in the past two years.
John Healey, the housing minister, said: ‘We can’t allow cheats to hang on to the tenancies of council houses they don’t need and don’t live in.’
The crackdown will be difficult for subletters, who have no rights or protection if a social home is reclaimed, and who can be evicted in as few as seven days.
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26/11/2023
Charities are urging the government to do more to help tenants, claiming 1.3 million low income households are struggling with their finances.
Shelter and the Money Advice Trust said 90 per cent of households earning under £20,000 (£25,000 in London) are in financial trouble, compared to 56 per cent in 2006.
They want the government to address affordability in the private rented sector and offer advice and support. Nearly 50 per cent of those in trouble had not received advice in the last year.
According to the survey carried out by the two charities, four out of 10 people on low incomes said their debts were impacting on their health rising to 50 per cent among households with children.
It also found 60 per cent of households in receipt of housing benefits or local housing allowance received less than the cost of their rent.
Shelter director of policy and campaigns, Kay Boycott, said many tenants at the lower end of the private rented sector faced a ‘daily battle’ to ‘keep their heads above water’.
‘The government must recognise the significant role the private rented sector is playing in bearing the brunt of this recession by increasing funding for advice and support services, and setting out a long-term vision for the sector,’ she said.
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23/11/2023
The Government’s stamp-duty holiday on properties sold for less than £175,000 has not helped nearly as many homeowners as first predicted.
Figures obtained by property website zoopla.co.uk show that in the first 12 months of the holiday until 1 September, buyers saved just £173m compared with the £600m predicted by the Government.
A combination of factors lies behind the disparity. First-time buyers the most likely to benefit from the holiday have found it hard to get mortgages due to tight lending criteria. Transaction levels have also been lower than normal across the whole market with a shortage of properties to buy.
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