Homes for Scotland chief executive Nicola Barclay is addressing members of the Scottish Parliament today. She said that a deficit of 80,000 homes has arisen in Scotland over the last decade.
鈥淕iven the fact that some 80,000 fewer homes have been built in Scotland since 2008 whilst the growth in number of households over broadly the same period has more than doubled, it is easy to see why our country is in housing crisis and why many people struggle to find a home that is affordable and that meets their needs and aspirations,鈥 she said. 鈥淎 major contributory factor has been a near 40 per cent drop in the amount of companies building less than 50 homes a year and who traditionally focused on smaller sites.鈥
Barclay said that Homes for Scotland has formed a special project group and is working closely with the Scottish government to define the solutions required.聽 鈥淭hese may include easier access to development finance; the allocation of smaller sites; simplified planning processes; and a desire from regulators and enablers to help this important part of our industry to thrive once more,鈥 she said.
Urging everyone to unify around the need for more homes, she added: 鈥淗ome building is a complex, costly and lengthy business around which some fundamental misunderstandings have grown such as the common accusation that companies deliberately hold back land to inflate house prices.聽 As many studies have shown, most recently last year鈥檚 Letwin Review, there is absolutely no evidence of this: it simply doesn鈥檛 make any business sense in terms of cash flow and return on investment for builders to hold on to land they could put houses on and sell.聽
鈥淲hat builders do need, however, is a strategic pipeline of land to inform their investment, employment and training decisions.聽 If we are to build the homes we need, we must move beyond this red herring and examine the real issues delaying housing delivery.鈥
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