Supply of new homes set to drop

15 Jun 09
The supply of new housing in England is almost certain to have dropped in 2008/09 after almost a decade of steady expansion, according to the Department for Communities and Local Government.

By Neil Merrick

The supply of new housing in England is almost certain to have dropped in 2008/09 after almost a decade of steady expansion, according to the Department for Communities and Local Government.

The supply of new housing in England is almost certain to have dropped in 2008/09 after almost a decade of steady expansion, according to the Department for Communities and Local Government.

Figures published on February 27 show that 200,300 homes were built in 2007/08, compared with 193,100 the previous year. When changes to the use of existing properties are taken into account, along with demolitions, there was a net increase of 207,500 homes (up by 4% on 2006/07).

There has been a steady increase in housing in England since 2002/03, when net supply rose by 10% to 143,700.

But the rate of growth has slowed over the past two years. The 2007/08 increase was partly because 1,800 fewer homes were demolished.

According to the DCLG’s Net supply of housing 2007/08, a 19% reduction in completions of new homes in 2008 compared with the previous calendar year means net housing supply is likely to have fallen in 2008/09 for the first time in seven years.

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