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Platitudes and rhetoric do not build houses.



How the Budget will affect ordinary people 


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Chancellor of the Exchequer Philip Hammond is not of this world. His budget delivered to a noisy House of Commons on Wednesday, presented the usual give away to landlords in the form of tax breaks for those who offer longer-term secure tenancies, an additional £3 billion for Brexit planners, a change to the “millennial travel card” extending the 30% discount to those under 31, an immediate £350 million to the NHS for this winter followed by £1.6bn more next year, and the immediate abolition of stamp duty for first-time buyers on properties worth up to £300,000. The observer may be excused for believing that Hammond had presented a budget where everyone in the country was a winner and that all was rosy within the United Kingdom economy as the conservative benches erupted into baying and shouting "Hear, Hear, Hear" or "Yea, Yea, Yea" and other incoherent babel after each of Hammond's sentences if not every phrase.

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The reality of course is that this much trumpeted budget, hyped as the Conservative party getting back onto the front foot in British politics with new initiatives and programmes for the NHS, Education, Universal Credits, Growth in the economy and not least of all, housing. However, as is the usual case with conservative governments interested only in their own positions and the vested interests of those they represent in business and finance, the budget promised mountains but delivered only molehill's and very small molehill's at that. Of course, with the fractured and splintered cabinet, we may wonder how this Chancellor ever managed to produce a budget at all. Indeed, on the night before the budget speech, Hammond was summoned to a meeting at 10 Downing Street, where a small cabal of the cabinet and Theresa May herself, rewrote huge chunks of the Chancellors speech which, from any person with an ounce of honour and backbone, would have produced an immediate response "OK. Present the budget yourselves as I am resigning with immediate effect and will not be in the House tomorrow". However, backbone and honour are not to be found on the front benches of this government nor in the cabinet.

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To select just one element of the budget proposals, we should direct our attention towards housing. The housing crisis in this country, is amongst the most pressing problems we face, with thousands of families being unable to afford to purchase a house or rent a home, where ever increasing prices coupled with relentless pressures on earnings continue to push the price of a home beyond the means of the majority of people. Prime Minister May, pledged to take "personal charge" for government plans to fix the UK’s “broken” housing market and to build 300,000 new homes every year. The way in which this Conservative "miracle" is to be achieved consists almost entirely of a council tax "premium" on empty properties, new money for a "home builders" fund, a "small sites" fund, financial grantees to support private house building, urban regeneration, training of construction workers, Oliver Letwin MP to Chair a new body to look at ways to speed up planning permissions and an immediate cut in Stamp Duty for first time buyers on properties worth up to £300,000 (The average price of a home in London and South is currently in excess of £500,00).


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Even a cursory glance across Hammond's housing proposal's alone, reveal that the Chancellor does not fully understand, if at all, the reality of the United Kingdom's housing crisis. Tinkering at the edges and producing rhetoric for public consumption and to pacify the baying mob on Conservative back benches, (who were particularly abusive and ignorant on Wednesday) does not cement one brick with another to build a new home. Removing the starting rate of Stamp Duty, provides very few first time buyers with the opportunity to purchase a home particularly in those areas of the country where demand and the resultant price level is at its highest. Councils and builders throughout the country have no incentive or encouragement to build homes for rent to relieve the chronic shortage of rented accommodation and the proposal for the "privatisation" of Housing Associations is only to make "the governments books look better" and give the private sector another avenue of opportunity in their quest to make even more profits from the housing crisis and its victims.
The thousands of families desperately seeking homes have been betrayed by empty words and gestures which do nothing but grab the headlines of the Express or Mail or other news media of similar political persuasion. The first time buyers struggling to save enough money to put down a deposit even on a "low cost home" have been duped by rhetoric and deceit. The homeless on our streets have been abandoned by a government which pays lip service to an outrageous scandal, but does nothing to address the underlying causes because Hammond and May and the rest of this wretched government do not live in the real world.
The world where people are important and where decent housing is a right for all not a grudging gift from the privileged few.






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