Crawley
faces a predicament. The population is growing and the provision of new housing
isn’t keeping up. With the average age of a Crawley person being 36.8 years
(compared to the South East average of 40.0 years old and the national average
of 39.4 years of age), the population of Crawley is growing at an alarming
rate. This is due to an amalgamation of longer life expectancy, a fairly high
birth rate (compared to previous decades) and high net immigration, all of
which contribute to housing shortages and burgeoning house prices.
Durham University have produced some statistics specifically for the Crawley Borough Council area.
Known as the UK’s leading authority for such statistics, their population projections
make some startling reading…
For
the Crawley Borough Council area ... these are the statistics and future
forecasts
2016 population 112,541
2021 population 118,526
2026 population 123,780
2031 population 128,368
2036 population 132,736
The
normal ratio of people to property is 2 to 1 in the UK, which therefore means...
We need just over 10,000 additional new properties
to be built
in the Crawley Borough Council area over
the next 20 years.
Whilst
focusing on population growth does not tackle the housing crisis in the short
term in Crawley, it has a fundamental role to play in long-term housing development
and strategy in the town. The rise of Crawley property values over the last six
years since the credit crunch are primarily a result of a lack of properties
coming onto the market, a lack of new properties being built in the town and
rising demand (especially from landlords looking to buy property to rent them
out to the growing number of people wanting to live in Crawley but can’t buy or
rent from the Council).
Although
many are talking about the need to improve supply (i.e. the building of new
properties), the issue of accumulative demand from population growth is often overlooked.
Nationally, the proportion of 25-34 year olds who own their own home has
dropped dramatically from 66.7% in 1987 to 43.8% in 2014, whilst 78.2% of over
65s own their own home. Longer life expectancies mean houses remain in the same
hands for longer.
The swift
population growth over the last thirty years provides more competition for the
young than for mature population. It
might surprise some people that 98% of all the land in the UK is either industrial,
commercial or agricultural, with only two percent being used for housing, which
means one could propose expanding supply to meet a expanding population by
building on green belt – that most Politian’s haven’t got the stomach to
tackle, especially in the Tory’ strongholds of the South of England, where the
demand is the greatest. People mention brownfield sites, but recent research
suggests there aren’t as many sites to build on, especially in Crawley that
could accommodate 10,000 properties in the next 20 years.
In
the short to medium term, demand for a roof over of one’s head will continue to
grow in Crawley (and the country as a whole). In the short term, that demand
can only be met from the private rental sector (which is good news for
homeowners and landlords alike as that keeps house prices higher).
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