Housing

Ideas

The case for connecting Britain’s hinterlands

An unhappy commuter successfully sued Greater Anglia this month after he said he experienced 183 delays in 550 journeys between his home in Halesworth and Ipswich. His claim that he spent almost 28 hours in the past year waiting for delayed trains comes amidst the latest in a line of dismal rail statistics from the Office of […]

Economics

If you drink in the pub, you shouldn’t need to buy it

Glory be, the villagers have bought the pub to stop it being turned into a block of flats. That, at any rate, is the story we’re being told. But it misses the point: if the villagers had been going to the pub for a drink more often then no one would have wanted to turn […]

Economics

What Tokyo can – and can’t – teach us about the housing crisis

Be more like Japan. That is the takeaway from a Bloomberg column by the always-interesting Noah Smith. His is the latest article to look at Tokyo’s approach to housing for answers to the spiralling cost of homes in comparable Western cities. On the surface, the lessons are straightforward, with Tokyo serving as a heartening reminder […]

Policy

Grenfell’s legacy should be real community control

The fire in Grenfell Tower, which began shortly after midnight on the morning of June 14 2017, killed 71 people. Three hundred and seventy-six households from the Tower and from neighbouring buildings were made homeless. Health professionals estimate that over 10,000 people from the wider community will experience physical or mental health problems as a […]

Politics

Let the market fix the Tories’ housing problem

During the 2015 General Election, Ed Miliband’s flagship pledge to cap energy prices was derided by conservatives as a deranged idea from the 1970s. The then-PM David Cameron accused “Red Ed” of “wanting to live in a Marxist universe”. Yet within two years, the idea had found its way into the Conservative election manifesto, along […]

Economics

The government is ignoring popular, easy fixes to the housing crisis

Horrified passengers suddenly realize their boat has a leak. They frantically start to paddle it with their hands towards a distant shore. The engine and sail sit ignored and unused. Meanwhile, someone at the stern refuses to raise the anchor. Theresa May’s announcement of new housing policies today has something of that feel. No-one can […]

Ideas

New taxes are no way to reduce generational inequality

Lord Willetts today gave a speech at the Resolution Foundation calling for wealth taxes to be imposed on the baby boomer generation in order to fund their health and social care in old age and to prevent the burden being placed on younger generations. Moreover, he has also called for a radical rethink of the […]

Ideas

Does the Conservative Party really need new ideas?

It’s obvious to even casual observers of British politics that the Conservative Party is desperately short of ideas. So much so that for several years now, they have mostly been implementing policies put forward by the opposition. The energy price cap, the living wage and even the exemption from stamp duty for first time buyers are just some of the […]

Ideas

Britain’s property taxes are broken

Next month’s Spring Statement – the first such event since Philip Hammond moved the Budget to the autumn – will reportedly be a pared-back event. The Chancellor plans to further burnish his reputation for excitement and unpredictability by being on his feet for no longer than 20 minutes and doing no more than updating the House […]

Economics

UK welfare is a CDO with property as its junior tranche

At the turn of the century banks got involved in a new product called a collateralised debt obligation, or CDO for short. These are basically lots of bits of loans packaged up into contracts that can be sold and bought. As a product it makes total sense  —  it provides one of the key elements […]

Economics

Our sluggish planning system is to blame for high house prices

We’re told that there are near half a million planning permissions out there as yet unbuilt. Enough to keep the house-building industry going for five years – thus it it argued that it cannot be the planning permission system which causes our housing problems. This is not, sadly, how reality works. For it can – […]

Policy

The Tories will pay a high price for failing to tackle the housing crisis

What does a statistician do on a day off? He goes to Rightmove, and makes himself ill by looking up the prices of his first London flat, in dear old Bow E3. Because statisticians never take the day off, not really, I plotted the sales price for the property against time, which I’ve measured as the number of […]

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