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The number of houses received by planning in England last year decreased to the lowest since 2014, the Glenigan Show data provider. This will need to be increased by 53 percent to reach 370,000 planning permits, which the work has been established within its national planning policy at the end of last year.
“The latest planning figures show that housing supplies in short and medium conditions are at a critical crisis,” said Neil Jefferson, executive director of the “Construction Builders” industry.
The Starmer Administration made an increase in the construction of the house key, as it was elected last July, promising 1.5 million new houses over five years.
The ministers said they needed to overcome the number of planning permits provided to reach this level of supplies – the highest in the generation – because not all houses that eventually built permit.

The work is blamed for allegations of planning made by the former conservative government, under pressure from the development of the development, for the decline in the construction of the house. The reduction in the activity also reflects the effect of higher interest rates.
Gleanigan figures, which are also used in official statistics, show that 242 610 houses were resolved in England in 2024, which is 2 percent compared to a year earlier. But the data also shows the permits provided in the last quarter of the year.
Labor reforms have highly praised the home construction industry, but the HBF, and the National Housing Federation, stated that only these measures would not be enough to reach the target of 1.5 million.
Critics of commercial builders who provide the vast majority of new UK houses say these companies intentionally Build more slowly Than they could do to control supplies and achieve higher sales.
The industry claims that the tariffs for construction are limited to the demand of buyers, and they say that the decision is a government that will help buyers with a loan scheme similar to the help, which took place from 2013 to 2023. For the first time, buyers, in particular, have fought with accessibility, given the higher mortgage rates over the last two years.
Companies say local authorities are already responding to Westminster pressure after planning reforms.
Graham Proter, CEO of MJ Gleeson, who has house construction and strengthening units, said the authorities are increasingly approving the development to maintain control over decision -making rather than calling for their heads to the Central Government.
He said the progress in planning on earth is “more positive than you think. We see it.”
The Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Self -Government stated: “This government has inherited a broken planning system.. We have already taken decisive steps to get a shovel in the ground.”
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2025-03-06 05:00:00