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    8 commenti

    1. Physical-Staff1411 on

      As long as they sort out the processes as currently it takes too long to acquire homes England finance for SMEs. We don’t have the time to wait for their application turnaround.

      Private finance currently minimum of .8% per month. With 1% in and 1% exit plus a barrage of legal , broker and surveyor fees.

      Makes a lot of jobs unviable.

    2. OddEffective5664 on

      Thankfully Maggie isn’t here to see this Shane brought to our beautiful land, I’m sorry they do this sweet lady

    3. callsignhotdog on

      >With long-term, flexible capital, the National Housing Bank will be able to act as a consistent partner to the private sector, bringing the stability and certainty that housing developers and investors need to make delivery happen.

      Nothing being built directly, just subsidising the private sector to build more.

    4. hgjayhvkk on

      Good to see

      I don’t get this though.

      > The National Housing Bank, a subsidiary of Homes England, will be publicly owned and backed with £16 billion of financial capacity, on top of £6bn of existing finance to be allocated this Parliament, in order to accelerate housebuilding and leverage in £53 billion of additional private investment, creating jobs and delivering over 500,000 new homes.

    5. kettle_of_f1sh on

      Ah lovely, 500,000 new houses for illegal immigrants.

    6. Darklabyrinths on

      Is this to turn villages into small towns as Princess Anne was promoting recently

    7. Peachy-SheRa on

      This is good news which will encourage building homes people can actually afford to live in. 40% of people used to live in council homes in 1980, now it’s 7%, with the rest at the mercy of private landlords. We need to have more state owned (or backed) housing stock where people can feel safe and secure. Shelter after all is a basic right and need, not just an asset to make profit from.

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