People in Britain have switched from being anti-housing to being in favour of more new homes being built in their area, a new study has found.

The survey of 2,036 adults confirmed the shift detected by the British Social Attitudes Survey over the past six years as voters now say, by a margin of 48% to 33%, that they would support more homes being built.

The poll by ComRes for the Centre for Policy Studies was carried out to measure the impact of the housing crisis on public attitudes, and found that the new stance holds true across all ages, social classes and political persuasions, and in every region except the South East of England.

By an even wider margin, of 63% to 19%, voters agree that house prices near them have become too high. The proportion agreeing ranges from 79% in London to 45% in the North East but the majorities are both commanding and universal.

However, while a majority of voters would support limited building in the countryside, the proportion agreeing has remain unchanged since 2010. And two of the most prominent proposals for development, weakening green belt protections around train stations and other existing infrastructure, or permitting building on the least attractive land within it, are both unpopular with the voters.

There is, however, a clear message that if local communities received more of the benefits from housing being built, residents would be more likely to support house building and that people would be more likely to support house building if the homes were of better quality.

The polling also confirms previous CPS polling showing that home ownership remains universally popular. A majority at every age, would advocate buying a house rather than renting, showing that there is both the appetite for more housing and the will to allow the Government to act to deliver it.

 

‘Unsurprisingly, this polling backs up the assumption that people want houses they can afford and think that house price inflation has gone way too far,’ said Robert Colvile director of the Centre for Policy Studies.

‘What’s interesting about this poll is that a significant majority, 48% of voters, support more homes being built in their local area. This is a huge shift from attitudes even a few years ago where NIMBYism was the clear winner,’ he pointed out.

‘It’s clear from this polling that if this Government is to win over ordinary working people, fixing the housing crisis should be top of ministers’ to do list,’ he added.

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