Today’s Spring Statement ‘isn’t a housing policy moment, it’s a confidence moment’

Chancellor Rachel Reeves with red box
Rachel Reeves

Chancellor Rachel Reeves is set to deliver her Spring Statement today, outlining the government’s current economic outlook and providing updated forecasts for growth, inflation, unemployment, public spending, and tax receipts.

Although the Spring Statement carries less weight than a full Budget, the OBR’s projections it presents can influence future fiscal decisions. The independent Office for Budget Responsibility assesses whether the government is on track to meet its fiscal rules, which include ending borrowing for day-to-day public spending by the close of this Parliament and ensuring public debt falls as a proportion of national income.

The chancellor has said she intends to reserve major announcements, like tax increases, for the Autumn Budget with the Statement serving as an economic update. Hopefully, this will ease pre-event hypothesising and reduce negative shockwaves for construction.

However, the government is not off the hook, according to Dr David Crosthwaite, chief economist at BCIS.

He said: “The Spring Statement period offers an opportunity to give construction businesses and project stakeholders clear, credible signals.

“An update on the Infrastructure Pipeline would be a good place to start. The next iteration was due in January, yet no further details have been provided.

He continued: “The government’s private finance strategy is also overdue and could give construction businesses greater clarity on when projects are likely to come to market, and the level of investment required in skills, technology and capacity to meet demand.

“A refreshed housing strategy would be welcome too. Housebuilding output has been sluggish amid affordability challenges and demand constraints.

“Targeted support for first-time buyers appears to be the most immediate lever available.

“Given it is highly unlikely the government will reverse its tax policies in the Statement to reduce business costs, the focus must shift to restoring pipeline visibility and stimulating real demand.

“Get those right and investment should follow. Without them, confidence may falter and construction output and wider growth will likely remain subdued.”

Dominic Agace, chief executive of Winkworth, hopes today’s Spring Statement will contain no new announcements.
He commented: “Some stability is good after all the mansion tax machinations. However, it feels like this government needs to build its reputation amongst many who believe taxation will continue ever upwards under the Chancellor’s stewardship and so are holding off buying while the government remains in power.  We are looking for a clear update without any lingering policy initiatives affecting sentiment in the market.
“Where  the chancellor could help with future measures would be to support demand for housebuilders from first-time buyers with a re-hash of help to buy. This would mean more homes built more quickly for first-time buyers.  Without this predictable demand,  housebuilders may choose more profitable schemes to build or delay plans pending better economic conditions, all leading to the government missing their housebuilding targets.
“The other area would be to present the UK and particularly London as more welcoming to wealthy overseas workers. It would be good to row back on the latest 2% addition to stamp duty for them, which adds to the already 5% extra.  This would keep the balance in favour of the domestic market but perhaps mean there was more encouragement for overseas investors who are important to many new build schemes in London—to give developers the confidence to build out and pay for the necessary affordable homes.   At the moment it feels too much is stacked against the overseas investor.”

The Spring Statement will be a ‘confidence moment’, says Adrian Moloney, group lending distribution director at OSB Group.

He commented: “The Spring Statement should be viewed as a temperature check on the economy rather than a trigger for housing policy change. We do not expect significant new interventions for the property market, and the more meaningful impact will be how convincingly the Chancellor reassures markets on inflation, borrowing and fiscal credibility.

“For consumers, what really matters isn’t a headline in Parliament, it’s what happens in the markets afterwards. Mortgage rates are shaped by inflation expectations and swap markets, not political soundbites. If the Statement helps strengthen confidence that inflation is continuing to ease, we’re likely to see a more supportive pricing environment filter through for borrowers, particularly those looking to remortgage this year.

“For brokers, stability is valuable. When funding markets are calmer, lenders can price and plan with more certainty, which usually means fewer abrupt product changes and a more predictable advice landscape. That makes it easier to guide clients through decisions, especially in the specialist space where circumstances can be more complex.

“For landlords, the current challenges are well documented. Our latest Landlord Leaders research shows rising mortgage costs, compliance pressures and tenant affordability remain front of mind. The Spring Statement is unlikely to change that overnight. But if it helps steady expectations around interest rates and borrowing costs, that could ease some refinancing pressure and support longer-term confidence in the sector.

“Ultimately, this isn’t a housing policy moment, it’s a confidence moment. And in lending, confidence is often what moves the dial.”

 

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