Benefits ‘scandal’ is inevitable legacy of council house sell-off

Trusted article source icon
Monday, February 20, 2012
Profile image for Western Morning News

Western Morning News

Large amounts spent in state benefits at the centre of the capping row go in paying for housing – Martin Hesp thinks we’re going backwards rather than forwards on bricks-and-mortar basics.

Many people will have experienced involuntary facial reactions including spluttering and jaw-dropping – and these will have been caused when those in paid work learned that the unemployed can, for the present time at least, obtain more than £26,000 a year per family in state benefits. The Government, of course, is trying to cap this sizeable sum under the Welfare Reform Bill.

No doubt much of the spluttering and jaw-dropping inspired by some newspaper headlines will have been coupled with imagined thoughts of professional benefit-scroungers booking winter holidays to Tenerife and such like.

I almost went down the outraged, blood-pressure inducing, route myself until I remembered that nothing in this life is quite as it seems – which is why we have that strange modern phrase “elephant in the room”.

In this case the big thing that looms vast, enormous and unmoveable – but which very few people talk about – is the simple but necessary requirement we humans have for shelter. A massive part of these seemingly gigantic handouts is actually paid towards the cost of keeping roofs over people’s heads.

Now let’s use another well-known but older phrase: the one that talks about reaping and sowing.

When Conservative politicians went hell for leather down the road that led us all towards a private housing market – selling off hundreds of thousands of council-owned homes under their Right to Buy legislation as Margaret Thatcher and her cronies embraced the need for greed – what did they expect would be the eventual outcome?

The inevitable answer was only ever going to be found down at the end of an expensive bijou cul-de-sac.

Private landlords are not there to provide social housing – they do not own homes because they feel a charitable need to help others less fortunate than themselves – they rent out property purely to make money. Which is fine if you want to make a few people wealthy while driving up the price of housing in an ever-spiralling vortex so you can make out that this, in some inexplicable way, gives the nation’s overall worth more value.

But it is absolutely disastrous if, years later, you happen to end up in charge of the nation’s social benefit purse strings. Take the cost of housing out of those gigantic benefit payments and the bill met by taxpayers would be dwarfed in a trice.

Flogging off the council houses – which equated to a vast chunk of hugely valuable real-estate – at heavily discounted prices achieved what exactly?

The answer is simple: it guaranteed in absolute terms that a couple of decades down the line the nation’s social housing bill would be astronomical and, even worse, unsustainable.

When society owned all the bricks and mortar which provided social housing it at least meant there would be some kind of sustainability because houses tend to out-last people.

Old council houses used to become someone’s new home when, for whatever reason – death or change of circumstances – the previous tenant vacated. Now old council houses (in the South West at least) change hands to become someone’s new holiday home.

Between 1980 and 1998, some two million residential properties of the kind that used to be called council houses were sold in the UK after Margaret Thatcher pushed forward the Right-to-Buy legislation as part of the Housing Act 1980.

You won’t need me to remind you that tenants were encouraged to buy their council houses by huge carrots, dangled in the form of generous discounts. You may also recall that local authorities were legally restrained from using the monies raised from the sale of these homes to build more social housing.

During this kind of rant I like to imagine a visiting alien of superior intelligence landing in his spaceship on a fact-finding mission: “So let me get this straight – you humans realised there was a need to house all members of society and eventually you became so civilised that, communally, you built homes for the millions of less well-off?” he might muse.

“Then you reversed this sophisticated trend by selling all these homes with no thought for the generations of needy that might follow – with the inevitable result that you now feel angry when paying huge bills for social housing to a comparatively small number of private landlords.”

He might even add: “On my planet we would exterminate the leaders who thought up this disastrous policy.”

The sums involved are astronomical – and I for one would rather see my taxes spent on building the bricks and mortar of tomorrow’s social housing than paid direct in to bank accounts of today’s private landlords who may, for all I know, be spending winter somewhere warm and luxurious like Tenerife.

3
Tweet this article
Report

3 Comments

  • Profile image for Exeter Planning

    by Exeter Planning

    Tuesday, February 21 2012, 2:51AM

    “I'm a private landlord, by which I mean I rent out my spare room in a 2 bedroom semi. I do it because I need the money having become unemployed from the public sector. My lodger is in receipt of housing benefit of £80 per week, which is rather less than the agreed rent.

    I'm now told that his benefit will be reduced by approximately £15 per week, as the Government believes a single person can home themselves in Exeter for £65 per week, or, laughably, landlords will accept reduced payments.

    It's never been easy for those on benefits to secure housing in the private sector (look at all those "No DSS" adverts), and this is going to make in nigh on impossible.

    I don't want to ask him to leave, but I may have no alternative. What is this doing nationwide to the homelessness figures?

    Morally there must be something wrong in a society that allows this to happen whilst paying obscene "bankers' bonuses". I know bank chiefs have a very responsible job, blah blah, but there must be some kind of middle ground.”

  • Profile image for MrMeMeMe

    by MrMeMeMe

    Monday, February 20 2012, 7:08PM

    “With no radical change in housing policy the real financial terror coming down the road will be millions of private renting pensioners who can't afford these rents when they retire ... The Housing Benefit burden , to extend Martin's metaphor , will be visible from outer space by then ...These are golden days for buy to let but it can't go on...taxpayers won't stand for it ...”

  • Profile image for nick113

    by nick113

    Monday, February 20 2012, 4:39PM

    “Martin Hesp misses the point; selling a council house doesn't reduce the total number of houses, it just means that it becomes owned by someone who is likely to want to look after and improve it, rather than a powerless council tenant. If there are too few houses the finger should be pointed at the planning system which frustrates developers at every turn, and NIMBYs who say the want more affordable houses......provided they are built nowhere near where they live!

    If rents paid by housing benefits have become too high it's because supine councils have failed to negotiate properly with landlords, not surprising as councils are spending other people's money, so can't really be expected to care too much. The government's new cap is a step in the right direction, and rents will fall as landlords will want some rent rather than none.”

        Your comments awaiting moderation

        Add your comments

        max 4000 characters