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The chancellor has announced £15.3bn worth of new measures to intervene in the housing market in an effort to deliver 300,000 homes annually by the mid-2020s.
In his Autumn Budget this afternoon, Philip Hammond’s most expensive single measure on housing was providing £8bn of “financial guarantees to support private housebuilding and the purpose-built private rented sector”.
The new funding will bring the total spend on housing to £44bn over the next five years in a variety of capital, loan and guarantee based programmes.
However, he mentioned no similar renewal of the successful guarantees scheme for affordable housing.
Mr Hammond also announced another £2.7bn for the Housing Infrastructure Fund, bringing it to a total of £5bn, a capital grant programme intended to help councils build infrastructure to unlock homes in the areas of greatest housing demand.
This afternoon’s funding announcements also included a £630m small site fund, which the chancellor said would “unstick the delivery of 40,000 homes”, £400m for estate regeneration and £1.1bn “to unlock strategic sites including new settlements and urban regeneration schemes”.
The existing government scheme to guarantee loans to housing associations, Affordable Housing Finance (AHF) is due to end next month, and Mr Hammond did not mention any new measures to replace it.
Nor was there any discussion of Sajid Javid’s public call for £50bn of government borrowing during the next five years, or a similar proposal pitched by housing associations to Number 10.
In his response, Jeremy Corbyn welcomed some of the government’s proposals, but called for “a large-scale publicly funded housebuilding programme”.
This story will be updated.
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