05/05/06
              
              Much needed affordable homes in the UK will be jeopardised by
                a new Government proposal to tax property development, says the
                RICS and BPF (British Property Federation).
               The laudable intention behind the proposed Planning
                Gain Supplement (PGS) is that revenue from uplift in land value
                is collected by the state and used to pay for infrastructure
                and housing where it is most needed. 
              In reality, the lack of political consensus means that landowners
                will hold back potential development land in the belief that
                the next government will overturn the new tax. 
              It will impose a tax on business expansion and take the means
                of delivering local development priorities away from local government. 
              RICS chief executive Louis Armstrong, said: "Due to the
                long-term nature of the planning cycle, landowners can afford
                to sit on land until it is most advantageous to develop it. PGS
                is a disincentive to bringing land forward for development and
                the timing couldn’t be worse. 
              "The affordability crisis facing many people today can
                only be improved by increasing the supply of housing. With the
                best intentions, government is setting out to increase the flow
                of land available for development but, because of a fundamental
                misunderstanding of how the development process operates, its
                proposals are likely to achieve the opposite result." 
              BPF chief executive Liz Peace, said: "The current planning
                system ensures developers and local planners work together for
                the benefit of their local communities. 
              "The PGS proposal removes this vital link between the provision
                and the local benefit, will discourage development, and will
                see money disappear into a central pot, rather than being raised
                and used locally to meet local infrastructure needs.’ 
              The proposals come under the scrutiny of the Office of the Deputy
                Prime Minister (ODPM) select committee today, where RICS and
                BPF will jointly make their representations. 
            
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