The HBF welcomed the increase but said it was 鈥渟till well short of the 60,000 per quarter needed to meet demand, or the 64,500 that were being granted on average during 2006/07鈥.
This is the second set of quarterly figures since the introduction of the national planning policy framework (NPPF) in April. Under the NPPF, local authorities are required to assess their housing need now and over the coming years and then allocate sufficient land to meet it.
The HBF said that some local authorities were abiding by the positive planning principles set out under the new system and developing robust housing plans, but some were not.
HBF executive chairman Stewart Baseley said: 鈥淭he increase is good news and hopefully a reflection of the positive planning principles of the new system. It is just one quarterly increase and we are still well short of the number needed but we hope it starts a trend that will continue in 2013.聽聽
Allan Wil茅n, an economist with construction data firm Glenigan, added: 鈥淧rivate sector projects provided the main impetus behind the rise in third quarter planning approvals, offsetting the weakness seen during the previous three months. In addition, there was a surprising rebound in social housing projects. If maintained, the increasing number of projects securing planning approval will help developers to open up new sites and increase construction activity as market conditions progressively improve over the next two years.鈥澛
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