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Scottish Government should bail out' housing market, says Scott



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Published Date: 18 August 2008
FIRST Minister Alex Salmond was today urged to take control of a crisis-hit housing market.
Tavish Scott, a leadership candidate for the Scottish Liberal Democrats, said Mr Salmond must deal in "non-fiction" when he delivers a lecture on economic challenges at the Edinburgh International Book Festival tomorrow.

Pre-empting the speech, Sh
etland MSP Mr Scott said: "The crisis in the housing market is spreading like cancer. And all the evidence suggests that Scotland is now infected. Growth in the Scottish housing market has ground to a halt."

He warned that new houses in construction fell by 50% in the last quarter and claimed there had been 15,000 redundancies in the sector.

Mr Salmond is also due to announce new initiatives to help address the challenges facing the Scottish economy during the annual Donald Dewar lecture at the festival.

The Scottish Government insisted "decisive action" had already been taken and stood by its plans for 35,000 homes a year.

Mr Scott urged the First Minister to include three policies in his speech, including new resources for housing associations and councils to invest in unsold private homes and land.

Mr Scott also called for the UK and Scottish governments to work together with social landlords and to cut the bureaucracy of housing grants.

He added: "If the First Minister stops dithering and takes control, he can help a construction industry under massive strain, so that it can survive to build more private and affordable housing in the future.

"By doing so, he can also help address the chronic shortage of affordable and social housing in Scotland's communities.

"This is an important test for the First Minister. The time to act is now. Less spin and more action – that's what Scotland expects."

A spokeswoman for the government said £1.5 billion has been invested in housing over the next three years.

The spokeswoman added: "We recognise that developments in the credit-markets will have a significant adverse effect on house-building over the short to medium term.

"However, the underlying long term requirement for higher levels of housing remains.

"We are working to ensure that house-building is best placed to grow again once market conditions recover."

The calls came as Mr Salmond and his cabinet gathered in Pitlochry for the third of four meetings away from Holyrood this summer.

The visits have been organised to allow local communities an opportunity to speak to ministers about the issues important to them.

Local charities and voluntary organisations were invited to an evening event today before a public questions and answers session at the town hall tomorrow.

Mr Salmond will be in Edinburgh for the book festival speech tomorrow evening.

Meanwhile, communities minister Stewart Maxwell is due to meet representatives from the Homes for Scotland and the Scottish Federations of Housing Associations tomorrow.



The full article contains 481 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 18 August 2008 2:29 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

Scottish 'N British,

18/08/2008 14:47:33
Inverness, Pitlochry.... When is He going to Aberdeen?

"This is an important test for the First Minister.

The time to act is now. Less spin and more action – that's what Scotland expects."

You said it, Tav.
2

Alan B,

18/08/2008 15:12:03
Everytime Tavish Scott opens his mouth you feel like banging your head against the wall. He just seems clueless.

I just hope the lib dems choose one of the 2 other leadership contenders. With this guy they will continue sinking to oblivian.





3

Alan B,

18/08/2008 15:18:00
#Scottish 'N British

I cann't have escaped even your notice that most of the powers relating to the housing market a reserved matters.

- stamp duty
- interest rates

- regulation which would not help now but could and should have prevented the silly house prices that we have.

The scottish government do not even have the ability to borrow if they were going to start a huge housing program themselves which personally i think the government should not involve themselves in. So if Scott wants serious money diverted for the government to start a house building program then he needs to identify where he would make cuts.
4

Scottish 'N British,

18/08/2008 16:05:03
3

Eh? Methinks this is a Separatist "getting his retaliation in first", it's a money issue, and as such search for reasons/excuses as to why the SNP is powerless to act.

Something along the line of 'we can't do that - it's reserved'. As even you should be awarre, Salmond is always sticking his hooter into "reserved" matters.

But OK, let's take what you say at face value.

If Salmond can't come good on the hosung programmme issue why then, at FMQ on 14 May, did he castigate the previous Executive for their inability to build more houses themselves?

5

Gregor Addison,

Glasgow 18/08/2008 16:23:51
And perhaps Tavish Scott can tell us whether or not he thinks Scotland should get the 10% oil fund. Particularly since he represents a constituency that over the years has done rather well out of the oil.
6

Scottish 'N British,

18/08/2008 16:37:20
5

Oil!!

I knew a discussion aboot finances couldn't take place without some reference to oil. What's the price of oil, BTW?


7

Calum10,

18/08/2008 16:50:54
Here we have Tavish Scott a committed Unionist actually making an arguement for full independence to take control over the levers of the Scottish economy.

Well done Tavish for arguing the SNP's case for Scottish independence.
8

Jimmy Le Pie,

18/08/2008 17:14:59
Tavish Scott has as much relevance in Scottish politics as David Marshall, ex MP for Glasgow East.

None
9

Miss H,

18/08/2008 17:16:07
4 The Scottish Government has no powers to borrow - fact.

However councils do and housing associations do.

By scrapping right to buy on new social housing the SNP Government has done what is necessary to incentivise and support that.

We would not be in such a mess if Labour/lib Dems had has the balls to do that at any point during the past 8 years but they didn't. So it is a bit ludicrous Tavish Scott suddenly developing an interest in social housing now.
10

Senga Jean,

18/08/2008 17:22:29
#6 Of course. It is as if you regret that Scotland has this valuable resource which the Great British Government is wasting. Invest for the future? No! Spend.Spend.On cake and circuses. Time for Independence.
11

,

18/08/2008 17:36:37
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
12

Rev. S. Campbell,

Bath 18/08/2008 18:04:11
"Growth in the Scottish housing market has ground to a halt"?

Good!

The "growth" in the housing market has simply ensured that most people are getting into debt desperately trying to get on the "property ladder" or pay crazy 100% mortgages on wildly overpriced houses. Even the most deranged free-market capitalists accept that the market needs a "correction", and you can't have that when it's still growing. Recent price falls are a good thing for everyone except the greedy who think of a house as an investment not a home.
13

A Friend of Fernando Poo,

18/08/2008 18:11:12
This Scott chappie seems like just another old-fashioned socialist getting ready to mug the taxpayers.

As for the housing markets: it was the credit bubble that was the problem. What's happening now is the cure.

House prices are falling, which will help first-time buyers who were frozen out of the markets by too-high prices. Banks have been impoverished and thus can no longer make reckless loans such as 125% mortgages. Buyers are more and more required to put down a 25% deposit - something seen prior to the credit bubble as necessary for sensible borrowing.

The only possible conclusion is that the politicians should let the process play out and the markets will fix themselves.
14

Richardinho,

18/08/2008 18:37:54
I don't think it's the governments place to intervene here. Remember that one persons' loss is another person's opportunity.
the fall in value of one person's house may mean that someone else has the opportunity to buy a house cheaply.
15

Oldnat,

18/08/2008 18:39:28
Scott's just making a bid for the Estate Agent's votes.
16

The Spook in Leith,

18/08/2008 20:09:29
Scottish Government should bail out' housing market, says Scott

Good god not another silly lib trying to act like a politician.

17

Andrew BOD,

Aberdeen/shire 18/08/2008 22:52:56
"The time to act is now. Less spin and more action – that's what Scotland expects."

Under previous administrations, Scotland has been used to NO ACTION. Action has been central to this government's strategy and the people have responded in support, in spite of the fact that they are a minority government.

"If the First Minister stops dithering and takes control..."

Tavish, I think you mean... "If the Prime Minister stops dithering and takes control." AS doesn't dither.

Your own comments are spin. Most Lib Dem policies never get into the statute book, and so you belong to a party that will forever be mere lobbyists.

18

Highland Property Bubble,

18/08/2008 23:28:40
Why on earth should the government be asked to spend public money purchasing property or land at overinflated valuations in order to protect property developers’ profit margins? If developers have stock on their books which is failing to shift, then they should follow the route that every other industry has to and simply lower prices. This action would also have the bonus effect of helping to free up the market and also reverse the trend for cutting jobs within the sector.
On the subject of "affordable" housing, why should the taxpayer be held to ransom for even more money to be spent on these ludicrous projects.
Let the property crash continue to unfold and the price correction to occur unhindered.
Aren't we supposed to be living in a free economy?
19

connaughtboy,

stonehaven 18/08/2008 23:50:33
Tavish once again proving that he is an eejit !
20

Coileach an taobh Tuath,

19/08/2008 00:09:57


And how many council houses did the Labour/Liberal Executive Build?

Another fine mess that they've gotten Scotland into.....

There's a bit of the 'boy who cried wolf' about Tavish


21

dtaj wmt gaga,

19/08/2008 00:10:55
It better be a big bucket he uses!
22

Longdirk Maceth,

NZ 19/08/2008 00:14:29
12 Rev. S. Campbell, Sopt on!

Scottish 'N British, If brains were taxable???? Well you know the rest right?
23

Scottish 'N British,

19/08/2008 10:37:17
9

I'm not talking about right-to-buy.

FMQ, 14 May.

In a parliamentary answer, Salmond criticised the previous Executive for their inability to build more affordable housing.

Yet, as you say, he knew perfectly well he isn't in a position to do so himself?

24

The Former Mr. Angry,

Perth 19/08/2008 11:14:42
Tavish Scott does not realise that his Labour friends have been bailing out the housing market for about 10 years with cheap credit and lax controls on lending. He now proposes more of the same to fix a housing market that is naturally bust as the result of government interference.

In effect he proposes helping out house sellers, builders, estate agents and solicitors at the expense of the rest of the tax-paying public. A failed strategy but then what do you expect from a Lib-Dem?

 

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