‘Bedroom tax’ fails to free up larger homes, finds London housing association group
Research by a group of London housing association’s has found that the ‘bedroom tax’ has failed in its objective to free up larger social homes in the city.
Introduced in 2013, the UK government’s Social Rented Sector Size Criteria (SRSSC), more commonly known as the bedroom tax, saw households deemed to have ‘spare’ rooms lose housing benefit depending on the number of additional rooms in an effort to encourage residents to downsize.
However a three-year study by g15, which represents London’s 15 largest housing associations, has revealed that only a handful of residents affected by the bedroom tax said they had moved as a direct result of the policy.
An interim report the research found that around a quarter of tenants were affected by the policy between 2013 and 2015, but three quarters of those affected in 2013 remained in the same situation over the three-year study period.
Of the remaining one quarter, 12 per cent stopped receiving housing benefit and 14 per cent no longer had extra bedrooms due to changes in family circumstances.
Research for the Real London Lives project used qualitative and quantitative research examining the lives of London’s social housing tenants.
The study also found that the proportion of tenants on housing benefit not under-occupying their home according to the bedroom tax definitions fell from 59 per cent in 2013 to 52 per cent in 2015.
The findings also reveal that:
David Montague, chief executive for L&Q and chair of the g15, said the findings raise questions about the policy’s success in encouraging residents to move to appropriately-sized homes.
He added: “Our three year study suggests that there is little evidence under-occupied families were motivated to move into smaller homes as a result of the policy. Given the shortage of affordable housing in London, it is questionable whether residents would have been able to downsize, even if they wanted to.
“As a sector, we are keen to work with the new government to examine how we can address the lack of affordable homes, which is the underlying issue. The g15 aims to create 180,000 new homes for London over the next decade in an investment worth around £50 billion, but we will not be able to do this without support from our partners.”
The final report is due to be released this autumn.