At the company鈥檚 annual general meeting in Flintshire today, he will tell shareholders that local authorities are delaying decisions on planning applications for housebuilding projects that are needed to drive economic growth.
Redrow alone has more than 5,000 proposed new homes blocked in the planning process.
鈥淭he lessons of history are there for all to see,鈥 Mr Morgan says. 鈥淒uring the period 1932-39 it was the huge growth in private house building that largely led the UK economic recovery, providing hundreds of thousands of new jobs and solving the chronic housing shortage of the day.聽 The parallels with today's issues are profound.
鈥淚n July the government issued its draft national planning policy framework (NPPF) for consultation, a process which ended some three weeks ago.聽 The proposed NPPF represents the biggest change to planning policy in decades.聽 Providing its principles are not watered down it should produce a speedier and more balanced planning system and a platform for the growth in new house building which the country desperately needs.
鈥淭he existing planning environment remains frustratingly slow and costly, with far too many local authorities using the current hiatus as an excuse to impede and delay planning applications. 鈥
He said that Redrow alone has 30 live planning applications for 5,219 plots that are either delayed beyond the 13 week statutory determination period or subject to appeal.
He adds: 鈥淎s most sites are purchased subject to planning, the positive side to the planning delays has been a reduction in net debt from a year end position of 拢75m to 拢68m, representing a gearing level of 15%. Our balance sheet is strong, which leaves us well placed to pursue the right opportunities as they arise.
鈥淲e are living in times of great economic uncertainty, which weighs heavily on the market.聽 Yet despite the poor economic news there remains strong underlying demand for new homes.鈥
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