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Friday, 22 May 2026

Decanting

The Daily Telegraph had a classic example of the self-refuting headline last week, "London’s social housing problem nobody dares discuss", in which Sebastian Milbank, who sounds like an Evelyn Waugh character, proceeded to discuss at length the problem of social housing in London. That problem was narrowly defined as "council flats are wasted on poor people" (I paraphrase). The article claims that the capital's economy is constrained not by high housing costs, or too much capital stuck unproductively in property, but by social housing not being on the market: "This massive stock of housing, built on the most valuable land in the country, is permanently off the market. You cannot buy or rent any of it, no matter how hard you work, and waiting lists can stretch over decades." I'm not sure if Seb understands that council tenants do indeed pay rent. Maybe he thinks a council flat is a handout. What irks him is the high number of economically inactive people, but there's also another, sadly predictable dimension to this: "Not only do most of those who live in London’s social housing not work, around half of the lead tenants are foreign born."

After the great success of Right-to-Buy, the Tories want to implement a policy of Obliged-to-Sell. This is a shift from the demand-side to the supply-side, so it chimes with the fans of "abundance" and thereby gains the support of liberals who believe the state should concentrate on infrastructure rather than on welfare. This includes the professional YIMBYs who are prominent on social media, though they prefer to talk about the "misallocation of resources" (i.e. the economically inactive taking up space that could house a thinktank drone) rather than about how many council tenants are migrants or disabled. There is also a tendency to forget that most of the economically inactive are retirees, who are disproportionately represented because they managed to get a tenancy in the 1970s before Right-to-Buy and the de facto moratorium on council house building kicked in during the 1980s. The focus on the inactive also means a lack of attention is paid to council tenants in work. This blindspot reflects that they are disproportionately unionised public sector employees, such as transport and NHS workers, and therefore the ideological enemy.


Over the last 40 years, following the postwar dip caused by decanting to the suburbs, the inner London population grew by over a million1. This is still lower than the peak in the early 1900s, however that is the result of slum clearance and the reduction in density (i.e. overcrowding in those slums), which nobody is seriously proposing to reverse. Far from being an inhibitor of the economy, the growth in jobs has actually outpaced the growth in homes over the last 20 years. Ironically, this reflects increasing densities (the number of people per home), after a long period of falling densities, and an increasing rate of economic activity across the population. Housing is under stress in London but this is because of high demand and constrained supply, not because of the misallocation of resources to social housing or because of a high percentage of the economically inactive among social housing tenants.


Since Right-to-Buy ran out of steam around the millennium, council housing stock has remained fairly constant in absolute terms, but that means a relative contraction as a share of total stock due to the growth in the private rental sector, which in turn reflects the growth in the total population and in the number of jobs. This can be seen clearly in the chart below. What Mr Milbank is talking about is a fraction of housing stock that is ever less significant to the total. As the chart makes clear, that growth in population has been economically captured by the private rental sector. Home owners will have seen their property prices rise, but this is notional wealth that can only be realised by downsizing or moving out of London, and increasingly these are less favoured options because of the need to provide for children who could not get on the property ladder otherwise. In contrast, rents are current income and they have been rising faster than GDP growth, hence the popularity of Buy-to-Let.


That the growing unaffordability of London property has coincided with the growth of the private rental sector is not mere correlation. Why has the sector grown? Because rents have risen rapidly, so promising greater returns to investors. The growth in rents has proceeded even during the cost-of-living crisis because landlords correctly calculate that tenants will reduce discretionary expenditure, and even expenditure on other necessities, such as food and clothing, before they consider moving to a cheaper tenancy. This makes it very difficult for  young people on entry-level wages to rent, while those who can just about afford it have low disposable incomes which lowers aggregate demand. The real issue in London is not council tenancies "wasting" a resource but high rents in the private sector. 



The flip-side of the proposal that London council properties be put on the market so that they are "allocated" to the more economically productive is the decanting of the less productive elsewhere. This has in fact been happening for years, since well before Boris Johnson, the then Mayor of London, insisted there would be no "Kosovo-style social cleansing" on his watch (there was). There is an army of  service staff who live in the cheaper suburbs and face long commutes to clean offices and wait on tables in Central London, who fifty years ago could have reasonably expected to get a council tenancy. Much the same story can be told of other European cities, such as Paris and Berlin, where gentrification has produced the distinctive "doughnut" of a denuded city centre. London is by no means the worst and its history of large council estates in the heart of the city has meant it remains socially mixed, even if those estates are increasingly neglected (Grenfell Tower) or sold off to private developers (the Heygate Estate).

The solution, pretty obviously, is to build more council houses for the general population instead of treating them as a reservation for the "economically inactive" (a crude misrepresentation as most council tenants are in work). The problem is that local authorities were first constrained from building new housing, and then encouraged to pursue public-private partnerships in which "affordable homes" would be delivered by property developers (they rarely were). Once the remaining constraints on council house building were removed, local authorities then found themselves starved of funding due to central government austerity. The predictable result was even more reliance on the private sector, both in terms of "estate regeneration", with its inevitable decanting out of London, and private landlords charging extortionate rents for people that the local authority had a statutory obligation to house. This latest Telegraph initiative, with its supporting cast of manic YIMBYs, is simply picking over the bones.


1. Charts from Housing in London 2025 and London’s housing stock - London Assembly Research Unit November 2024

6 comments:

  1. I wonder how much Reform UK's big wins in the 2025 and 2026 local elections in "Red Wall" areas have been the result of the decanting of poor people to those areas from London and other richer southern towns and cities?

    This could have that effect through two mechanisms:
    i) Many red wall people are likely to have been racists all along, but the political salience of that racism would have been less while their areas were overwhelmingly white -- an influx of poor non-whites decanted from London would have helped turn their latent racism into Reform votes.
    ii) White decantees could have spread far-right ideology themselves in the places where they ended up, particularly if they believed they were decanted in the first place to make room for more productive foreign immigrant workers.

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  2. Ben Philliskirk24 May 2026 at 12:43

    I don't think many people from London have been 'decanted' to Wakefield or Sunderland.

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  3. Ben Philliskirk25 May 2026 at 11:59

    I can't say I'm convinced. There was a lot of 'decanting' from cities to DHSS accommodation in seaside resorts back in the 80s and 90s, but it didn't trigger much far-right political sentiment at the time.

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  4. «the growth in jobs has actually outpaced the growth in homes over the last 20 years. Ironically, this reflects increasing densities (the number of people per home), after a long period of falling densities, and an increasing rate of economic activity across the population. Housing is under stress in London but this is because of high demand and constrained supply»

    That "constrained supply" is not the technical driver of the situation but the "growth in jobs has actually outpaced the growth in homes": property speculators look at ratios like job growth vs. housing growth to target profitable areas (or ratios like growth in coffee shops vs. growth in kebab shops and payday lenders).

    The property boom that has redistributed upwards several trillions depends on the concentration of "good" jobs in some areas, as property profits are far from uniformly distributed across the UK, here is for 2005-2015:

    https://loveincstatic.blob.core.windows.net/lovemoney/House_prices_real_terms_lovemoney.jpg
    http://www.lovemoney.com/news/53528/property-house-price-value-real-terms-2005-2015-uk-regions

    The technical issue not even remotely council housing in London, it is the heavy concentration of New Labour and Conservative public spending in attracting businesses to already congested areas in order to generate massive profits for their core constituencies of "Middle England" voters and finance executives.

    And the latter is the really important issue: rising property prices and rents are essential in getting middle-class workers to vote for thathcherism that is for lower wages and pensions because they get more than compensated for that by big property profits redistributed from the lower classes.

    Big property profits are the vital political deliverable that makes middle-class workers think their interests are more aligned with those of the upper-class than those of the working-class to which they still partially belong.

    My usual example of a 79-year-old retired carpenter in Cornwall (from an article on "The Guardian" in 2022): «who bought his council house in Devon in the early 80s for £17,000. When it was valued at £80,000 in 1989, he sold up and used the equity to put towards a £135,000 fisherman’s cottage in St Mawes. Now it’s valued at £1.1m. “I was very grateful to Margaret Thatcher,” he said.»

    That's around £10,000 a year profit redistributed to him in early 1980s pounds, and that became an average redistribution on average £30,000 per year between 1989 and 2022. Very grateful indeed.

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  5. «the heavy concentration of New Labour and Conservative public spending in attracting businesses to already congested areas in order to generate massive profits for their core constituencies»

    The usual example is CrossRail where £16 billions (220 million per km, "money no object") of public money were spent to generate 30% property price increases along its route.

    But an even bigger example is the Great Financial Bailout of 2008 and subsequent decade: without many hundreds of billions of public money and 0% loans handed out to the financial sector in London to support trader and executive compensation and refill their bonus pools a lot of property would have become unaffordable and housing in London today would be a lot cheaper.

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