Britain | Building blocks 

Labour’s growth ambitions demand more radicalism on planning 

Small tweaks to the existing system are unlikely to deliver a big change in housebuilding

A builder works on a construction site in Reading, Britain.
Crane surgeryPhotograph: Getty Images

At the heart of Labour’s economic strategy is a puzzle. All hope of repairing Britain’s crumbling public services is pinned on faster growth. To get it, Sir Keir Starmer, the Labour leader, says he is prepared to “bulldoze through” opposition to homes and infrastructure, largely by reforming a planning system that has become a brake on the economy. Yet for all the vigorous language, Labour’s policies are rather timid.

The diagnosis, at least, is spot on. In Britain it has simply become too hard to build. By preventing building where it is needed, argued Rachel Reeves, the shadow chancellor of the exchequer, in a recent lecture, the planning system has pushed prices ever higher and held back Britain’s most productive cities. She described planning as “the single greatest obstacle” to economic success.

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This article appeared in the Britain section of the print edition under the headline “Building blocks”

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