Thursday 25 June 2009

State house tenants to become home-owners. Cool! [update 2]

Time to praise a rare sighting of good government from this government.  National’s policy allowing state house tenants to buy “their” homes from September is almost all good.  As I said back when this idea was first floated:

    That's very good. That's very, very good. When Margaret Thatcher's Conservatives allowed sitting council house tenants to buy at a heavy discount the houses in which they lived it was enormously popular (indeed, her "right-to-buy housing revolution" as it was dubbed was the first enormously popular thing her Conservative Government had done) and enormously successful, and there's no reason it wouldn't be both successful and popular here.
    In the UK after introduction of Thatcher's 1980 Housing Act, home ownership grew from 55 % of the population in 1980 to 64 % in 1987; by the time Margaret Thatcher left office in 1990 it was 67 %. That's a huge jump, and it inspired a huge change in fortunes, and in expectations.
    With "right-to-buy" Thatcher wanted to create a social revolution, and she did. By 1995 2.1 million working class tenants had become members of the "property-owning democracy," changing Britain and these people's lives for the better. This is one thing I'm very pleased that the Nats have learned from the Tories (albeit twenty-seven years late), and very pleased to see Key's Pink Tories even talking about privatisation . . . any privatisation at all.

Sadly, it’s not all good. 

There was no suggestion at all that the houses could be bought at a hefty discount, which is what helped make Thatcher’s scheme so successful.  Further, the announcement from housing minister Phil Heatley included news of “a boost” for first-home buyers – i.e., an increase in government-subsidised (i.e., taxpayer-funded) mortgages for first-home buyers that will only help lift the price of starter homes.

And finally, it was accompanied by news that the money earned from these state house sales will be used to build even more state houses.  Which rather misses the whole point, don’t you think?

UPDATE 1:  There’s a good debate on this going on at Cactus’s place.

UPDATE 2: Lindsay Mitchell calls it “Sleight of hand socialism.”

8 comments:

Sus said...

".. the money earned from state house sales will be used to build even more state houses. Which rather misses the whole point, don’t you think?"

Yes, it does. Key is no Thatcher, sadly. That's the difference.

Shane Pleasance said...

And if its state subsidized mortgages, doesn't that mean we are paying a portion?

Shane Pleasance said...

Down South here in Tim's Gulch there are already some 'mismatches' between 'requirements' for HNZ customers, and actual "stock" &, ergo, vacancies - empty houses. Ditto Council supplied. Time to build some more, clearly.

Oswald Bastable said...

Let them live in shipping containers!

RobH said...

OT but on Maggie, any thoughts on the worth of her Enterprise Allowance Scheme (or whatever it was called)

Anonymous said...

Let them live in shipping containers!


Too good for them: what's wrong with cardboard boxes?

Anonymous said...

With regards to the last few sentences: WTF? Damn straight it misses the whole point. And more.

Clunking Fist said...

Let them live in shipping containers!

SOme folk already are, by choice:

http://www.sharearchitecture.co.nz/pics-wellington-container-house-p-130.html
or
http://tinyurl.com/b39ys4

"our" children have been "educated" in close equivilents for years, why are prisoners and the "poor" so special?