A consistent theme is cropping up here? Is anywhere building the infrastructure at the same time as the housing? They are definitely not near to me. Perhaps we would be more forgiving if that was the case. Until then.......
Why do you think Keilder was built? It's the largest lake in Europe an a lot of that water gets piped down south.
A consistent theme is cropping up here? Is anywhere building the infrastructure at the same time as the housing? They are definitely not near to me. Perhaps we would be more forgiving if that was the case. Until then.......
I see our PM us telling developers to stop sitting on land. In essence dont leave it to go up in value, Get summat built on it. But why?
If i had a ton of gold. I would sell it when it when i thought i could get the highest return. Same wth land. And i dont have either by the way. Why should land owners be pressurised to build because of failed government housing policies.
Thoughts please me dears.
I would tend to agree with the PM that building houses is generally good for the country and can see why she would want to encourage people to do it.
It's only good for the country if the additional infrastructure is built along with the houses.
The roads improved
New roads built
New Hospitals, more Dr's and Nurses
New Fire stations, more fire fighters
New Police Stations, more Police Officers
New Schools, more teachers
New Shops
New Parks and recreational areas with the communities where the houses are being built. Oops my mistake all the land that could be used for recreation has a house on it.
Sadly though it's just the houses that will be built and nothing else, the current roads get busier, the current emergency services get push to the limit and spread even thinner. More people die wating for an Ambulance to turn up, more property is destroyed through fire, crime goes up, kids education suffers as pupil numbers increase in classrooms with kids not getting the attention from teachers they require.
Building more houses on some level may be good for the someone, but it is in general a downward spiral without building new infrastructure to go with them.
I appreciate infrastructure should be a factor in any development, but the problems you describe are not brought about by house building. It's the same number of people living in the houses, just that they are in a slightly different area.
These problems are brought about by simple lack of investment in public services, whether people are living in nice houses or not.
Well that's a good 100K short this year then! (And go away a find out how wrong estimates of EU migration were for a 20 year period!)
...and while you are there, please research the production capacity of the UK construction industry.
...and of course, regional disparity is missing.
zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz
Why is demand side economics beyond some people?
I appreciate infrastructure should be a factor in any development, but the problems you describe are not brought about by house building. It's the same number of people living in the houses, just that they are in a slightly different area.
These problems are brought about by simple lack of investment in public services, whether people are living in nice houses or not.
Not as simple as that. For example, town A has 4,000 houses. It builds an extra 2,000 houses. Not all of the people for those extra 2,000 homes come from the existing population. Many will come from different areas, clearly not a million miles away to be fair, and may not have used the existing schools, hospitals etc. They may have been using those amenities elsewhere, another town, council area etc. New homes do bring new pressures although I totally accept that not every new house will add to the population of that area, they simply disperse some of the existing population.
Why do you think Keilder was built? It's the largest lake in Europe an a lot of that water gets piped down south.