Reeves to bring back housebuilding targets
Rachel Reeves has promised to "get Britain building again" by bringing back compulsory housebuilding targets as part of a wide-ranging plan to reboot the UK economy.
In her first speech as chancellor, Ms Reeves also said she would overhaul planning restrictions and end the effective ban on onshore wind farms in England in order to speed up national infrastructure projects.
She said the government would make the "tough" and "hard choices" to fix the economy, adding that the UK had lagged behind other developed nations for years.
She confirmed Labour planned to build 1.5 million homes in England over the course of this parliament, but said it was not a "green light" to any kind of housing development.
"The question is not whether we want growth, but how strong is our resolve? How prepared are we to make the hard choices and face down the vested interests?" she said.
"The story of the last 14 years has been a refusal to confront the tough and the responsible decisions that are demanded. This government will be different and there is no time to waste."
Former Bank of England economist Ms Reeves was appointed chancellor on Friday, after Labour's landslide election win.
She and her team worked through the weekend on the speech to business leaders and investors who have held back on investment in Britain in recent years amid the political chaos of the post-Brexit years and the Liz Truss mini-budget.
It is hoped her plans will unleash tens of billions of pounds of investment in green industry and housebuilding.
Speaking to business leaders at the Treasury, Ms Reeves said:
- Planning decisions for major infrastructure projects in Britain will be made nationally rather than locally in an attempt to stop important projects becoming tied up in years of red tape
- Green belt boundaries will be reviewed to prioritise brownfield and so-called "grey belt" land, which are poor-quality areas in the green belt such as disused car parks or areas of wasteland
- The transport and energy secretaries will prioritise decisions on infrastructure projects that have been "sitting unresolved for far too long"
- Additional planning officers will be recruited to speed up the planning process
- An assessment of the country's public finances has been ordered and the results will be presented before parliament's summer break, before a full Budget is held later in the year
Ms Reeves said that under the plans, the "right mix" of affordable housing and homes for social rent would be built.
Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner will oversee this, taking an "interventionist approach" to make it happen, she added.
Labour will also overturn rules brought in by the Tories in 2015 which effectively meant that a very small number of objections could block new onshore wind projects.
It should lead to hundreds of new turbines being built, but Ms Reeves conceded that there would be opposition to her infrastructure plans.
"I'm not naive to that, and we must acknowledge that trade-offs always exist," she said.
"Any development may have environmental consequences, place pressure on services and rouse voices of local opposition, but we will not succumb to a status quo which responds to the existence of trade-offs by always saying no."
-bbc