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The government has been urged to allow social landlords
greater flexibility over setting rents on a local basis as part of the
affordable rent model. The call from the Royal Institute of Chartered Surveyors
comes as part of a wide-ranging review into the UK’s residential housing
policy. In the review RICS said that the
£1.8 billion 2011/15 affordable homes programme was ‘not a long term solution
to the provision of affordable housing’, claiming that an ‘over-reliance’ on
borrowing against assets would leave housing associations unable to raise more
money after 2015. It said the government should consider allowing providers to
set rents within boundaries set by local authorities. Currently, under the
affordable homes programme, landlords can charge up to 80 per cent market rent
but these are set in consultation with councils, which can veto rents deemed to
be too high. RICS said allowing
landlords to work within pre-set parameters ‘would create homes that meet the
needs of the community’. The report also
called on the establishment of a cross-departmental group to look at how
affordable housing is funded. Download a
copy of the review from the RICS website.
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