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Pledge to increase housebuilding

Source PA News

Updated on 08 June 2010

The Government has promised to help people trying to get on the property ladder by boosting the number of new homes being built.

Housing Minister Grant Shapps said "powerful incentives" would be introduced to replace the "meaningless targets" put in place by the previous government to increase housebuilding rates.

He said instead of being told what to build and where, local residents would be able to develop their own vision for their community, with Local Housing Trusts set up to oversee the building of new homes.

He added that incentives would also create direct benefits for local communities, bringing jobs and investment, as well as more homes, to their area.

Mr Shapps said the coalition Government had also agreed to promote shared ownership schemes and help social housing tenants to buy or part-buy their homes.

He said: "I am simply saying to those who aspire to own their own home: this Government will support you, you will not be ignored. The age of aspiration is back."

At an event hosted by the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors, he said there were an estimated 1.4 million households who aspired to owning a property but were unable to do so because of house prices and mortgage availability.

He added that the average age of a first-time buyer who did not receive help from their family was now 37.

Mr Shapps called on mortgage lenders to support creditworthy borrowers. He said: "There is a risk that the market may not respond to changing conditions quickly enough, leaving creditworthy borrowers still out in the cold."

But he added that responsible lending and responsible borrowing were "two sides of the same coin", and consumers would also have to show that they could sustain home ownership.

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