A new report by Public First finds that meeting
The report was sponsored by
Combined with the wider benefits of increased construction activity and consumer spending from lower housing costs, these economic benefits would peak at £40 billion in 2034, equivalent to 6.5% of
The study comes as government figures show that just 3,990 homes started construction in the year to Q1 2025 - a collapse to historic lows.
Key insights from the report reveal that delivering 88,000 homes annually would:
*Generate more than £14 billion of GVA per year from 2028 through higher construction output - growth equivalent in scale to
*Deliver approximately £600 million of annual rent savings from 2035, helping renters with the cost of living and to save for mortgage deposits.
*Fundamentally transform
*Raise significant extra tax revenues, peaking at £14.6 billion in 2034 and strengthening the public finances.
The report calls for decisive action from policymakers to remove the barriers stalling homebuilding in
"The opportunity is there, but it will require decisive action from policymakers to remove the barriers holding back delivery. If we get this right, the benefits will be felt not just in
"If we can hit the ambitious goal of 88,000 homes a year, we can unlock a £40 billion dividend not just for Londoners but for the entire
"We recognise that some of the policy decisions to deliver are likely to be uncomfortable but the rewards available for bold leadership are crystal clear. The nation needs them. Voters expect them. We hope that decisive action follows."
The report models the economic impacts of meeting the Mayor of
The combined economic benefits of higher homebuilding are made up of increased construction activity, agglomeration benefits as a result of a larger housing stock, productivity benefits as a result of
The report can be read in full here.
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