The Budget 2017: BMF and NFB comment

The Budget 2017: BMF and NFB comment

Reaction and responses continue to come in for this year’s Budget. PBM presents the perspectives of the BMF and the National Federation of Builders (NFB) on the 2017 Budget.

Builders Merchants Federation

John Newcomb, Chief Executive of the BMF, said: “ The BMF is pleased that the Chancellor has acknowledged the profound need to deliver and build new homes. This needs to be an unflinching, unrelenting determination by government at all levels to narrow the gap between housing demand and supply. We also want to see the Government press ahead with its proposals contained in the Housing White Paper, as this will bring a welcome boost to housebuilders and to the manufacturers and merchants in the  building materials supply chain.

“Access to finance, available land, more SME builders, sclerotic planning approval, slow build-out rates, over-stretched local authorities, brownfield versus greenfield, and residents’ resistance, must all be confronted and resolved. However, we welcome the new money that has been found for the Home Building Fund, for small sites, and for construction skills. In addition, we are pleased to see the lifting of the cap on Housing Revenue Accounts for Local Authorities and the immediate scrappage of stamp duty for many first-time buyers.”

www.bmf.org.uk


National Federation of Builders

Delivering the Autumn Budget to the House of Commons, Philip Hammond reported on an economy that “continues to grow, create jobs and confound expectations”.

The Chancellor reported that the growth forecast for the economy had been revised downwards since March, with the GDP growing by 1.4% in 2018 and 1.3% in 2019 before rising to 1.5% in 2021. Hammond also announced that the Government will spend £44 billion in capital funding and loans to tackle the housing crisis. These include lifting the borrowing cap on local authorities with high housing demand, abolishing stamp duty for first-time buyers on properties worth up to £300,000, and pledged to build 300,000 new homes by the mid-2020s.

The National Federation of Builders (NFB) believes that the Government has delivered a good roadmap to begin addressing the housing crisis in the Autumn Budget, even though more concrete steps still need to be taken. The NFB welcomes action on allowing local authorities to borrow to build, tackling land banking and empty properties back into use. However, policies such as the abolition of stamp duty for first-time buyers on properties worth up to £300,000 could still fuel demand without doing much to stimulate supply.

Richard Beresford, Chief Executive of the NFB, said: “The budget shows that the Government has listened to the construction industry when it comes to solving the housing crisis. Although there is much more to do, we look forward to work alongside the Government in enabling construction SMEs to solve Britain’s housing crisis.”

www.builders.org.uk


Click here for other industry views on the 2017 Budget collated by PBM

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