The Scotsman

Council home sell-off leads to £2.3bn windfall

● Many properties now in the hands of buy-to-let landlords

- By CHRIS MCCALL

The sell-off of former council homes in Scotland since the turn of the century has generated a £2.3 billion windfall.

The average profit earned from the purchase of an ex-scottish council property under right to buy laws and its eventual resale was £25 a day, new figures have revealed.

Around 500,000 homes were sold in Scotland since the policy was introduced in 1980. The scheme launched under Margaret Thatcher was scrapped by the SNP three years ago.

Former council homes in Scotland bought under right to buy (RTB) laws and subsequent­ly resold have made a combined profit of £2.3 billion since the turn of the century, analysis has revealed.

Many of the properties, which were originally built by local authoritie­s to offer good quality housing to working families have since passed into the hands of buy-to-let landlords.

Giving council tenants the chance to purchase their homes at heavily discounted rates was a cornerston­e of Margaret Thatcher’s privatisat­ion programme, which saw state assets sold-off throughout the 1980s.

While popular with those who directly benefited, the policy has since been blamed as a contributi­ng factor to the housing crisis gripping parts of the UK.

Around 500,000 homes were sold under RTB in Scotland since the policy was introduced in 1980. It was scrapped by SNP ministers in 2016, with the devolved Welsh Government following suit this year.

The average profit earned from the purchase of a former council property in Scotland and its eventual resale was £25 per day, analysis by the BBC Shared Data Unit showed.

Three vendors were found to have bought under RTB north of the Border and then resold their houses on the same day – one for a £60,700 profit.

A total of 53,175 Scots remained in the same home they had bought under RTB as of April 2018, while 10,860 people were found to have transferre­d their property for reasons other than purely money.

Housing minister Kevin Stewart said that by ending the scheme, around 15,500 homes available for social rent had been protected over a tenyear period.

He added: “This will benefit current and future tenants, the wider community, and support our efforts to increase the supply of affordable homes for Scotland, which is the sustainabl­e, long-term solution to addressing housing affordabil­ity. Nearly 82,100 homes havebeende­liveredsin­ce2007 and we are committed to delivering at least 50,000 affordable homes by 2021, backed by over £3bn investment during the lifetime of this Parliament.

“Many people aspire to own their home, so alongside keeping homes available for rent, we also have shared equity schemes to help people on low to moderate incomes buy their own property.”

Across Britain, former council homes bought under RTB and sold on again have made a combined profit of £6.4bn. While the policy has ended in Scotland and Wales, it remains in force in England.

The Chartered Institute of Housing is among the organisati­ons which is now calling for a full suspension of RTB.

A spokesman said: “We support the principle of helping tenants move into home ownership if that’s what they want, but it cannot be at the expense of other people in need.”

The UK government said that anyone who aspired to buy their own home should be able to realise their dream.

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