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HRA Reform Finance Workshop Defend Council Housing Conference 19th March 2010 Steve Partridge www.cih.org Introduction • Project progress • • Problems and proposed solutions Some key issues • • • Could the finances work? Comparing risks Consultation CLG: developing the ‘offer’ • • • Self financing pilot project 2006-2008 Review of Council Housing Finance 2008-July 2009 Consultation -> legislation backed but call for ‘voluntary settlement’ using Housing & Regeneration Act 2008 • • Project team: range of agencies and authorities Three ‘workstreams’ – – – • Developing the financial detail Accounting and technicalities Capacity and awareness building Work aimed to produce a draft voluntary settlement What will be asked of authorities? • Previously felt that a definitive indication of acceptance of a firm voluntary offer, but… timing • Consultation across an expected General Election • Likely to request a ‘willingness to work in principle with government towards non-legislated settlement at April 2011’ – Might feel like a big draft subsidy determination(!) • • What will happen if some refuse terms? Will there be scope to ‘pilot’? Proposals in summary 1. Dismantle the current HRA subsidy system 2. One off adjustment of housing debt – Effectively 30 years worth of future HRA subsidy in one go – With an assumption of increased allowances expenditure 3. Rents retained locally (continued rent restructuring) 4. RTB receipts retained 100% locally 5. Strengthened (more transparent) ring fence guidance 6. Original 30 year business plan with debt profile 7. Nationally neutral between central and local government Future rental surpluses 8,500 8,000 7,500 Net Present Value est £13bn 7,000 6,500 GL rents 6,000 Allces incl debt charge 5,500 5,000 • The overall debt and use of surplus is an integral part of the ‘deal’ • Each LA (currently 172 going forward) gets a local NPV – share of the debt valuation 4,500 4,000 1 • 3 5 7 9 11 13 15 17 19 21 23 25 27 29 A ‘system’ close to ‘balance’ but destined for massive surplus as (if)… – – Rents converge to HA formulae and then continue to rise above inflation Allowances remain at current levels A word on the future for public expenditure • Commitment to reforming the subsidy system is strong ‘Localisation’ of revenue finances policy of all three main parties • Proportion of GDP that is borrowing and debt: total and annual 90 14 80 12 70 10 60 50 8 40 6 30 4 20 2 10 0 0 8/9 9/10 10/11 11/12 PSND % of GDP • • 12/13 13/14 PSNB % of GDP Pressure on public expenditure resources enormous and will last into the Spending Review after the next one and beyond What kind of controls might be expected? 14/15 Big issues (1): How much debt? • How will debt be allocated between authorities? • • • • When will rents be assumed to ‘converge’? Uplift for M&M allowances: nationally and locally - 5% Uplift for Major Repairs: nationally and locally – 24% What did the research say? • Economic and discount factors • • There will a distributional impact for the uplifts of debt It will be a deal: locally and nationally Big issues (2): Capital grants and borrowing • For authorities where… – A backlog of repairs remains for decent homes and other needs and the business plan can’t sustain needs without additional support • What will the grants be for? How will this be assessed? What will be the process? • LAs able to ‘prudentially borrow’ –currently constrained by the system Unfettered borrowing not an option – what kind of controls are necessary and appropriate? • • What impact might the economic situation have? Big issues (3) • RTB receipts 100% to be retained by the council – Issues about usage • Ring fence guidance • Could the settlement be ‘revisited’? • Technical treatment and approach to stock transfer Staying in – or self financing: case study Rent £ in subsidy system Rent £ under self financing Surplus Repayment/S ubsidy Repayment/S ubsidy M&M Interest M&M Interest Major repairs Major repairs • • Comparing how the Rent £ gets spent over 30 years Self financing: more of the £ gets spent on services and investment, less on repayment +/or negative subsidy Why self financing has more money • There will be more revenue money to spend over a longer period compared to staying in an unreformed system • Three principal reasons… – The uplift in allowances – The net effect of inflation – The effect of ‘discounting’ to work out the debt • Key issue: how much? Risks… from central to local • Risk profiles change under the new arrangements Risks reduced for a LA • Unpredictability in revenue resources • Loss of some future rental surplus Unchanged risks for a LA • Expenditure inflation greater than income inflation • Political intervention – but lower? Risks gained for the LA • Treasury Management • Interest rate fluctuations • Stock condition the council’s (and ALMO’s) responsibility Discussion and consultation • • • Consulting and influencing tenants Tenants influencing the council’s decision Announcement is not expected to say a great deal about tenant consultation… it’s not necessarily an ‘option’ SUMMARY Revenue and Capital