Planning Gain: Providing Infrastructure and Affordable Housing / Edition 1 available in Hardcover, eBook
Planning Gain: Providing Infrastructure and Affordable Housing / Edition 1
- ISBN-10:
- 1118219813
- ISBN-13:
- 9781118219812
- Pub. Date:
- 01/26/2016
- Publisher:
- Wiley
Planning Gain: Providing Infrastructure and Affordable Housing / Edition 1
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$130.95Overview
Mechanisms to tap development value are also a global phenomenon in developed market economies - whether through formal taxation or negotiated contributions. As fiscal austerity becomes an increasingly challenging issue, ‘planning gain’ has grown in importance as a potential source of funding for infrastructure and new affordable housing, with many countries keen to examine, learn from, and adapt the experience of others.
- a critical commentary of planning gain as a policy
- timely post credit crunch analysis
- addresses recent planning policy changes
Product Details
ISBN-13: | 9781118219812 |
---|---|
Publisher: | Wiley |
Publication date: | 01/26/2016 |
Series: | Real Estate Issues |
Pages: | 328 |
Product dimensions: | 6.60(w) x 9.70(h) x 0.90(d) |
About the Author
Professor John Henneberry is a charted town planner, a chartered surveyor and Professor of Property Development Studies in Department of Urban Studies and Planning at the University of Sheffield. His research focuses on the structure and behaviour of the property market and its relation to the wider economy and state regulatory systems. He has particular interests in property development and investment and their contribution to urban and regional development. He has developed a distinctive 'old' institutional approach to property research that focuses on the impact of social, cultural and behavioural influences on market actors, structures, processes and outcomes. He is a Fellow of the Academy of Social Sciences.
Professor Christine Whitehead is Emeritus Professor of Housing Economics at the London School of Economics and was for twenty years Director of the Cambridge Centre of Housing and Planning Research at the University of Cambridge. She is an internationally respected applied economist working mainly in the fields of housing economics, finance and policy. Major themes in her recent research have included analysis of the relationship between planning and housing; the role of private renting in European housing systems; financing social housing in the UK and Europe; and more broadly the application of economic concepts and techniques to questions of public resource allocation with respect to housing, education, policing and urban regeneration. Her latest book, with Kath Scanlon and Melissa Fernandez, Social Housing in Europe, was published by Wiley Blackwell in July 2014. She is a Fellow of the Academy of Social Sciences and was appointed OBE in 1991 for services to housing.
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Table of Contents
Acknowledgements xiiiForeword by Dame Kate Barker xv
Preface xvii
Notes on Contributors xxi
1 Introduction 1 Tony Crook, John Henneberry and Christine Whitehead
Purpose of the book 1
The development process and the creation of development value 2
The taxation of development value 4
Factors affecting effective development value capture 6
Property rights and ownership 7
The need for finance 8
The ownership of development rights 9
Taxing value or raising charges 9
Rules versus discretion? 9
Fixed taxes, tariffs and negotiated contributions 10
Hypothecation and contract 11
Key factors behind the development of planning gain policy in England 11
Political economy 12
The planning system 12
Central–local relations: Local discretion, innovation and adoption 14
Definitions 15
The structure of the book 16
2 The Economics of Development Value and Planning Gain 20 Christine Whitehead
Introduction 20
Why is land and its value special? 21
The potential to tax increasing land values without generating inefficiency 22
The impact of planning on development values – the creation of planning gain 25
How are these values achieved? 25
Planning affects land supply 26
Planning affects demand 27
Planning affects density of construction and use 28
Planning affects prices and quantities 29
Bringing together the possibilities 29
Instruments available to capture planning gain 32
Overview 34
3 Capturing Development Value Through de jure National Taxation: The English Experience 37 Tony Crook
Introduction 37
Betterment and development value defined 39
Compensation and betterment: the Uthwatt principles 43
Taxing development value: post-war national schemes 46
1947: The development charge and the central land tribunal 48
1967: Betterment levy and land commission 51
1974, 1975 and 1976: Development Gains Tax, the Community Land Scheme and Development Land Tax 54
Lessons learned 59
4 Planning Obligations Policy in England: de facto Taxation of Development Value 63 Tony Crook
Introduction 63
Planning obligations: the key principles 65
Using planning obligations to secure land and funding for affordable housing 74
The overall framework 74
Detailed requirements 79
Recent policy initiatives 83
Tariffs 85
Optional planning charge 86
Planning gain supplement 88
Community infrastructure levy 93
Changes to CIL and new LPA incentives 97
Viability and S106 99
CIL policy: concluding comments 100
Conclusions 101
5 Development Viability 115 John Henneberry
Introduction 115
Development viability 117
Threshold land value 120
Table of Contents ix
Development appraisal 121
Property development within the wider property market 121
Development appraisal 123
Estimating the residual value of a residential development site 124
Assessing the impact of planning obligations and developer’s contributions on the viability of development proposals 130
Accounting for spatial and temporal variations in the development market 133
Conclusion: addressing the viability dilemma? 136
6 The Incidence and Value of Planning Obligations 140 Steven Rowley and Tony Crook
Introduction 140
The growth of obligations 140
Methods for measuring the incidence and calculating the value of planning obligations in England 145
The number of obligations in England 151
Affordable housing obligations in England 155
The total value of planning obligations agreed in England 160
Planning obligations in Scotland and Wales 162
Rural exceptions schemes 163
Who pays for the obligations? 164
Conclusions 171
7 Spatial Variation in the Incidence and Value of Planning Obligations 175 Richard Dunning, Ed Ferrari, and Craig Watkins
Introduction 175
Defining and disseminating good practice in planning obligations 177
Review of earlier evidence 177
Good practice research and advice 178
Implications of evidence and good practice guides 184
A note on Scotland and Wales 185
Regional variations in the value of planning obligations 185
Quantitative analysis of the drivers of the incidence and value of planning obligations 187
Qualitative explanations for spatial variations in planning obligations 192
The changing practice context 192
Stretching the ‘rational nexus‘ 195
Delivery 196
Conclusions 197
8 Delivering Planning Obligations – Are Agreements Successfully Delivered? 201 Gemma Burgess and Sarah Monk
Introduction 201
Why consider delivery of planning obligations? 202
Types of planning obligations 203
Case-study evidence of successful delivery of planning obligations 204
Quantitative evidence on the delivery of obligations 207
The factors affecting the delivery of affordable housing obligations 210
Trends in the delivery of affordable housing 211
The impact of the economic downturn on delivery 216
Implementing the community infrastructure levy 220
Conclusions 224
9 International Experience 227 Sarah Monk and Tony Crook
Introduction: making comparisons and transferring experience 227
Australia 231
Planning policy, planning legislation and its administration 231
Developer contributions to infrastructure 233
Developer contributions to affordable housing 236
Germany 239
Planning authorities and the planning system 239
Special mechanisms for controlling growth 241
Land readjustment 242
Provision of housing and related infrastructure 243
The Netherlands 244
Planning institutions and planning policies 244
Changing housing policies 247
Providing land and related infrastructure 248
United States 250
The constitution, planning and its administration 250
Developer contributions to infrastructure: impact fees 252
The impact of fees on prices and land values 255
Developer contributions to affordable housing: inclusionary zoning and linkage fees 256
Linkage fees 258
Summary and conclusions: comparing the English and international experience 258
Table of Contents xi
10 Summary and Conclusions 269 Tony Crook, John Henneberry, and Christine Whitehead
Introduction 269
Policies for capturing development value 270
National approaches 270
Locally based approaches 271
International experience 274
Overview 275
The economics of planning obligations 276
The sources and measurement of value 276
The complexities in assessing development gain 277
Planning constraints 279
Approaches to capturing gains 280
The financial aspects of planning obligations 281
Conclusions 285
Looking forward: England 286
Looking forward: international experience 288
Index 291
What People are Saying About This
'This book makes a tremendous contribution to the subject by bringing together a rigorous theoretic approach, a clear narrative of developments since 1947, and a good deal of data on the revenue which has been gained for the public purse and on the new affordable homes secured from planning obligations. In particular, it is welcome to read a very clear account of why the taxation of land can be rather more distorting of land use than is sometimes supposed. This is a highly important book. The stress in the conclusion on moving towards public land banking is one I support. It also draws out the truth that government prefers to raise money from charges on development, rather than from property values (which, perhaps more rationally, could also be used to fund infrastructure) because this is not a tax and the effects are more hidden from the public.'
—From the book's foreword by Dame Kate Barker CBE, DBE, Dame Kate Barker is a non-executive director of several finance and housing companies. She is also a former member of the UK's Monetary Policy Committee and of the board of the Homes & Communities Agency. She undertook independent reviews for the UK government of housing supply and of the planning system in England.