NFB reaction and market insights to Conservative Manifesto

National Federation of Builders 2021

The Conservative party launched ‘Clear Action, Bold Action, Secure Future’, their manifesto for the 2024 general election.

Richard Beresford, Chief Executive of the National Federation of Builders (NFB), said:

“A healthy construction industry is the only way a nation can grow and unfortunately, construction has taken some great hits in these last five years. The Conservative manifesto announced tax cuts that will benefit our sector, particularly as almost fifty percent are self-employed; however, without pipelines of work, construction will not be able to avail from tax changes.

It is therefore frustrating that the Conservative manifesto intends to plough ahead with the recent changes to planning and housing policy which have caused new build completion to drop considerably.

We therefore have to question how 1.6million homes can be delivered, when previous more housing positive policy environments only delivered 835,680 homes over the previous five years.”

The eighty-page manifesto is written across sixteen ‘Our plan’ chapters, with many policies that construction will welcome.

• Shift from University education to technical qualifications and the Advanced British Standard
• Funding 100,000 apprentices
• Abolishing the main rate of self-employed National Insurance
• Simplify planning and speed up major infrastructure project sign off, so it takes only one year
• Reform Environmental Impact Assessments and other EU red tape which stops new housing
• Ensure statutory consultees improve development rather than frustrate planning applications
• Energy bill discounts for communities welcoming onshore renewables
• Fast track planning for brownfield housing and consider full expensing of brownfield sites
• Set land aside for smaller builders and lift Section 106 burdens on more smaller sites
• Abolish EU ‘Nutrient Neutrality’ rules
• SME focussed procurement reforms
• Abolish Stamp Duty for homes up to £425,000 for first time buyers and introduce a new and improved Help to Buy scheme
• Protect the green belt

Rico Wojtulewicz, Head of Policy and the NFB, said:

“The Conservatives have heard our manifesto asks on Section 106, infrastructure, Nutrient Neutrality and statutory consultee reforms. Reforms we have been pushing on for more than five years. However, most small builders will not qualify for support because the Government continues to see them as delivering fewer than ten homes, rather than the fifty that industry has been lobbying for over this past half decade.

We also have concerns regarding the commitment to brownfield and greenbelt protection, particularly as it is based on ‘gentle density’ in major cities and not ‘community density’ as the NFB has set out in its manifesto. This is because development built to a maximum of ten storeys, the gentle density definition, will pass the housing crisis on to the next generation as too few homes will be built, with mixed developments made broadly unviable. The NFB’s ‘community density’ approach ensures that in major cities, residential and non-residential needs are made viable in a well-designed and thoughtfully planned development.

There is much to welcome in the manifesto, particularly on apprenticeship and technical education; however, much of it was already on the table and policies that are currently decimating SMEs, such as the viability killing Biodiversity Net Gain not being reformed. Small builders will likely conclude that if the Conservatives were to win the next election, they would experience another parliamentary term of warm words but no action.”

EAN Content

Content shared by this account is either news shared free by third parties or sponsored (paid for) content from third parties. Please be advised that links to third party websites are not endorsed by Estate Agent Networking - Please do your own research before committing to any third party business promoted on our website.

You May Also Enjoy

Estate Agent Talk

Comment on how latest Rightmove data shows asking prices double the long-term average

Commenting on how the latest Rightmove data shows how asking prices are double the long-term average, Tom Brown, Managing Director, Real Estate at Ingenious, said: “Today’s data shows that the resilience and appeal of the UK property sector persist. Though we have seen higher inflation and sticky borrowing rates, we welcome the BoE’s recent rate cut…
Read More
Breaking News

Breaking Property News 16/09/24

Daily bite-sized proptech and property news in partnership with Proptech-X.   What are commercial building tenants really looking for in modern workspaces? With remote and hybrid working models becoming the norm, many businesses are beginning to downsize their office spaces. Indeed, compact, higher-quality environments are now preferred over the vast, traditional settings of the past,…
Read More
Estate Agent Talk

5 ways to improve your property site’s SEO

Getting your property site to rank well on search engines can bring in new leads and give your business the boost that it needs. Good SEO can make the difference between a site that draws in visitors and one that remains hidden. Here are five effective strategies to enhance your property site’s SEO and get…
Read More
Rightmove logo
Breaking News

Rightmove launches new Renovation Calculator

Rightmove has launched a unique new tool to help people explore the added value that existing, or planned renovation works might have on a property. The new Renovation Calculator is an enhancement to Rightmove’s Instant Online Valuation tool. Once people receive an instant online valuation of a property’s price, they now have the option to…
Read More
Rightmove logo
Breaking News

Rightmove House Price Index 16th September 2024

Autumn action starts early as movers spot window of opportunity   Average new seller asking prices rise by 0.8% (+£2,974) this month to £370,759. September usually sees a monthly rise in prices, but this year’s increase is double the long-term average, with prices supported by increased activity levels The traditionally busier Autumn market appears to…
Read More
Rightmove logo
Breaking News

Superstitious Brits avoid moving house on Friday 13th

  Rightmove today (13th September), reveals that people avoid moving on Friday the 13th, despite Friday usually being the busiest day of the week for people collecting the keys to their new home Analysis of data since 1995 reveals Friday the 13th is the quietest day for completions compared to any other Friday What’s more,…
Read More