Steve Morgan, chairman of Redrow has called for stamp duty and Help to Buy changes to drive the housing market forward and keep the economy growing.
Redrow founder and chairman Steve Morgan has called for stamp duty and Help To Buy changes. Mr Morgan was speaking at the launch of Woodford Garden Village, one of the largest brownfield redevelopments in the North West, where local community groups, politicians and industry professionals had gathered to help Redrow celebrate its opening.
During the day he highlighted how housing transactions have gone down as stamp duty has gone up and the tax was affecting people’s mobility: “Stamp duty has a huge impact on the market. Not only do buyers have to raise huge deposits, they then have to find thousands more in stamp duty. The last two increases have been very damaging, particularly to the London market.”
He also called for Government to extend the time limit from application to completion on Help to Buy equity loans to 12 months from the current six. This would enable first time buyers to reserve a new build house farther in advance of its completion when using the incentive; allowing them to compete with investors who are free to reserve at an earlier stage.
Overall the Redrow chairman was positive about the housing market and saw the current climate as a good time for housebuilders, with land finally coming through the planning system – albeit still too slowly for his liking – and for customers, with mortgage interest costs remaining low.
He was particularly passionate about the much anticipated Woodford Garden Village development, on the former Woodford Aerodrome site, near Stockport, in Greater Manchester; a brownfield site that will eventually feature around 920 new homes, a new primary school, and significant green space.
Steve said: “This is the first garden village site for over 100 years in the north west of England and one of the first of a new generation of garden villages with Redrow leading the way.
“It’s important that we’re creating sustainable new communities that have longevity and Woodford Garden Village is a prime example of that. It will be a self-sustaining development with a new primary school, shops, a village pub and doctor’s surgery to name but a few of its amenities.”
He thanked officers and politicians of Stockport Metropolitan Borough Council for their positive role in bringing the scheme to fruition.
For more information visit www.redrow.co.uk/woodford
Photo caption: Redrow Group chief executive John Tutte, Redrow NW managing director John Grime and Harrow Estates managing director Mike Riding with Redrow chairman Steve Morgan