16:18 PM, 21st December 2015, About 9 years ago 74
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Researchers from a landlord tax campaign group, who joined forces via the Property118 online forum, believe they have located the source documents behind the discriminatory taxation policies targeting private landlords which are being implemented by Chancellor George Osborne.
The landlord tax grab, which will make the housing crisis worse, was proposed by David Kingman, a non-economist, in a deeply flawed report which he wrote in 2013, the year he left university with a degree in – Geography!
In the Summer Budget the Chancellor (a graduate in History) implemented a recommendation that was in a report from the Intergenerational Foundation, written by David Kingman.
On his Linkedin profile, David Kingman states: “I was the lead author on a research project looking at the tax treatment of buy-to-let property which led to major policy changes in the 2015 Budget”.
He claims that his top skills are Urban Planning and Politics. However, he claims no skill in Economics, Taxation, or Business.
It is understandable therefore that his report displays a lamentable ignorance of the subject throughout, from the foreword to the conclusion.
A retired member of the ICAEW (who wishes to remain anonymous) has dissected the Kingman report and commented as follows.
FOREWORD
His colleague Ed Howker wrote the foreword. He claimed “MIRAS remains for buy-to-let landlords who deduct mortgage interest payments from their tax bills”. This is not true.
Landlords do not deduct interest from tax. They deduct it from income received and pay tax on the result, just like any other enterprise in the country.
Then he stated “Indeed, economically, buy-to-let investors should not imagine they are small-business owners. They are much less useful to the economy, rarely employing anyone who would not be employed by owner-occupiers to service their homes and deriving their income from gambling on house price rises.”
This raises several points:
Ed Howker goes on “Worse, the special treatment of landlords places first-time buyers at a disadvantage. This paper reveals good evidence that first-time buyers are losing out – paying more tax, enduring weaker mortgage terms and finding that buy-to-let investors are not encouraging more house building but pushing up the price of housing and skewing the types of homes that are built. Britain is getting good at building investment flats and worse at building family homes.”
This is more nonsense. Landlords pay tax on rental income and capital gains; owner-occupiers do not. Landlords do not decide what type of property will be built – developers and councils do that. He seems to be suggesting that landlords should buy more houses from developers – instead of owner-occupiers.
Building flats on brownfield sites in towns and cities is a very productive way of using land in areas that would not attract house buyers.
And that was just the foreword. Should tax policy be based nonsense like this?
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
David Kingman’s Executive Summary starts with “Landlords receive a public subsidy worth up to £5 billion in tax relief per year. This is relief that they are able to claim for their business expenses, including interest relief on mortgages.”
If this is a public subsidy, then every enterprise in the country that pays interest gets a public subsidy. It is absurd to call it a subsidy. Deducting interest from income to find the profit is just normal accounting
He states “The growth of buy-to-let hasn’t significantly increased the overall supply of housing. The “BTL boom” has mostly just led to increased competition between landlords and first time buyers for our existing housing stock instead.” This is just not true. 2.5 million out of the 3 million increase in the number of dwellings in England from 1996 to 2013 was due to the PRS. That is 83%
He continues “BTL pushes up prices. There is clear evidence showing that the growth of BTL increases overall house prices for everyone, including first-time buyers.” He doesn’t produce any evidence for this in the Executive Summary.
MAIN BODY
In the main body of his report, David Kingman states: “A study published by the National Housing and Planning Advice Unit (NHPAU) in 2008 argued that, based on their model of UK house price inflation, the BTL sector was responsible for increasing average house prices by up to 7% between 1996 and 2007 through the additional competition which BTL landlords added to the market. The authors note that average house prices would probably still have risen by 130% in real terms during this period for a range of different reasons.”
In fact the NHPAU study stated, on page 20, “For instance, since 1996 Q3 house prices increased in real terms by 150 per cent and, even without the estimated effect of BTL, they would still have been expected to increase by more than 130 per cent.” It also said “In term of affordability it is an open question as to whether a 7 per cent increase in house prices in 2007 Q2 represents a significant additional cost.” Indeed. 7 percentage points out of 150 is less than one-twentieth of the total increase.
It also stated “There is some evidence to suggest that BTL has increased the size of the private rental (PRS).”
In the very next paragraph of his report, David Kingman acknowledges that landlords have increased the supply of housing – but he only does so to complain that too much of it (in his opinion) consists of flats!
He writes: “Proponents of BTL often claim that it provides a social good by increasing the overall supply of housing which is available. However, there is evidence to suggest that this view is misguided; instead, the growth of BTL has skewed the supply of new housing towards the particular type of properties which are more likely to appeal to property investors, without having a substantial impact upon the overall amount of new housing which is being built.” So, in his opinion, financing new-build property developments does not increase the number of dwellings!
He continues “Nationwide, the BTL housing stock mainly consists of older properties, with only around 20% of BTL properties in new-build developments. Most new-build BTL developments consist of large complexes of one- and two-bedroom flats, often located on brownfield sites in formerly rundown parts of cities in the north and midlands of England, which have been built specifically for the purpose of letting by property investors.” Presumably, as these flats are not in London or the south east then they do not count towards increasing the supply, in his opinion.
In fact, “complexes of one- and two-bedroom flats, often located on brownfield sites in formerly rundown parts” were built specifically for the purpose of selling to whoever wanted to buy them, be they owner-occupiers, shared-ownership owners/renters, second-home owners, holiday-let owners or ordinary landlords. And of course, the developer also had to build affordable housing for housing associations, as the price of obtaining planning permission.
It does not seem to occur to David Kingman to wonder what would have happened to house/flat prices (and rents) if landlords had not increased the supply of new dwellings by 2.5 million in the period 1996 to 2013. Both would have gone up by more than they actually did if BTL had not increased the supply. So BTL has had a restraining influence on prices and rents. To claim that BTL has pushed up prices is a gross distortion of the facts.
Also in the body of David Kingman’s report is a list of revenue expenses, “meaning that landlords are able to claim tax relief against them.” He states “As the figures presented below will show, the most significant of these forms of tax relief is that on mortgage interest.” In that sentence he purports to convert a legitimate and normal business expense into a tax relief.
It is pure sophistry to say that we can claim tax relief for interest just because it is deducted from receipts to find the taxable profit, like it is in every type of enterprise in the country. It is politically motivated nonsense to select one of these legitimate business expenses and say it should be disallowed for people who bought property in their own names, as a punishment for borrowing to provide decent accommodation for those who need it.
RECOMMENDATIONS
Among David Kingman’s recommendations are:
“Reduce the ability of landlords to deduct their mortgage interest against tax, because this allowance is regressive and distortive” and
“Build more housing to reduce housing costs for young people”
It is no surprise in such a poor piece of work that no thought was given to the predictable effects of the first recommendation. Apart from increases in rents and/or eviction notices, which have already started, the first recommendation will have a negative effect on financing the last one.
CONCLUSION
David Kingman’s conclusion starts “This report has demonstrated conclusively that the generous tax relief which is given to private landlords causes serious distortions within the UK housing market.”
This is the opposite of the truth. The correct conclusions are:
BTL has increased housing stock by 2.5 million between 1996 and 2013.
BTL was only responsible for one-twentieth of the 150% price increase between 1996 and 2007, which is insignificant. Prices would have gone up even more if BTL had not financed the 2.5 million increase in supply – and so would homelessness.
Deducting finance costs is not a tax relief, it is normal accounting practice everywhere. Disallowing them for existing businesses is iniquitous and will be damaging for the economy. Rents will rise. Tenants who cannot afford the rises will be made homeless, to be put in temporary accommodation in whichever part of the country that it can be found, at greater cost.
A flawed report has resulted in a flawed Finance Act.
So there you have it!
You can download the full report produced by David Kingman HERE. Note some of the familiar phrasing used in both this report and the Chancellors Budget speech, e.g. “level playing field”
A group of landlords are looking into Crowd Funding a Judicial Review to consider the legality of Clause 24 of the Finance Act 2015 based on a variety of legal arguments, further details of which we are unable to report on until 26th December 2015 due to an official embargo. Apparently Boxing Day is one of the busiest days in the year for property related online searches.
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Sam Addison
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Sign Up10:22 AM, 22nd December 2015, About 9 years ago
Seems reminiscent of why we invaded Iraq to eliminate non-existent weapons of mass destruction. Different government, same idiocy!
Joe Bloggs
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Sign Up10:59 AM, 22nd December 2015, About 9 years ago
just a thought but has there been any response from GO's boss??? what GO has done is surely not good for business?
John McKay
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Sign Up11:06 AM, 22nd December 2015, About 9 years ago
Reply to the comment left by "Joe Bloggs" at "22/12/2015 - 10:59":
Give it time Joe. We'll probably have a round of denial, then admitting that GO did it, then if pressure rises (and let's make sure it does) there'll be questions as to whether Osborne is competent. My own view is that if he bases the country's economic policies (that will affect millions of it's inhabitants) on such a flawed document, there is only one answer.
Michael Jones
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Sign Up11:41 AM, 22nd December 2015, About 9 years ago
He ( the Chancellor ), also got the detail right with his plans for those in need. Thank goodness the process had some sense where the House of Lords rejected his plan saying go away 'think again' . Sense needs to be knocked into him from all directions ( otherwise, he may be saved by a growing economy revealing new revenue streams for him to pluck ) !
Andy Bell
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Sign Up12:18 PM, 22nd December 2015, About 9 years ago
Gideon's Rent Rising Invasion based on Dodgy Dossier.
Gangs of organised international investors welcome George Osborne's open door policy allowing them to take control of the UK's housing stock. Once in they'll have free reign to milk the system dry and push up poverty. David Kingman of the Intergeneration Foundation who supplied the report that George based his policies on, stated "I hadn't really thought it through but as all of us have been **** over, we have equality"
Mike W
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Sign Up12:46 PM, 22nd December 2015, About 9 years ago
There has been so much written on this issue that I must admit I have not had the time to read it all.
Two thoughts occur to me. The picture of the author - Kingman - looks young and the "report" so biased towards first time buyers would appear to indicate that he is a renter...... which of course must mean he has a landlord ...... who perhaps might have to increase the rent .... thoughts?
The second is that I think we landlords do not highlight enough the comparison with our near business neighbours: owners of guest houses, serviced accommodation ... perhaps we should consider hiring a cleaner to service the accommodation? Does that change our position? If not perhaps a meal or two? I'm sure you get the drift.... when is a BTL landlord a guest house landlord? Is GO really going to bring down the entire hospitality sector too?
Gareth Wilson
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Sign Up13:45 PM, 22nd December 2015, About 9 years ago
So a geography graduate, a history graduate, and a law graduate walk into a bar...
And the barman says... "You bunch of idiots, you've made my tenants homeless and destroyed my pension. I'll never vote for you again. Now get the hell out of my establishment before I go upside your heads!"
Kevyn Jones
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Sign Up13:53 PM, 22nd December 2015, About 9 years ago
The reason property prices are increasing is simply a matter of supply and demand. The number of homes required for various reasons is increasing in most parts of the country faster than the increase in new building. Therefore the price goes up.
Second home buyers create extra demand, but private landlords do not. Private landlords by definition will only buy a property if there are potential tenants willing to rent it. The demand is from the dwellers not the landlords.
Private landlords are not a cause of the housing problem, they are a result of it. If colleges provided sufficient halls of residence for their students, they would not need BTL properties. Likewise if councils and housing associations provided enough homes for long term tenants, they would not need BTL properties.
The idea that private landlords are exploiting the need of people to have housing is as ludicrous as saying that Tescos are exploiting the fact that people need food to survive.
Back in the 70's, the Government started the right to buy scheme. This greatly reduced the rental housing stock, however, they did not reinvest the money they received in new affordable housing. The result was the generational time-bomb, which we are now experiencing.
Appalled Landlord
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Sign Up14:22 PM, 22nd December 2015, About 9 years ago
Kingman’s document is political propaganda masquerading as a “ground breaking” research paper. I suspect that the conclusion was written first, and he had to work back from it, to satisfy IF.
The question is, did someone give him this task or did he take it upon himself, having just graduated from an irrelevant faculty?
Laura Delow
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Sign Up17:33 PM, 22nd December 2015, About 9 years ago
It wouldn't surprise me if Clause 24 ends up being a red herring & they do make an about turn on it. The old adage of "if something you really want to bring in could be a major political hot potato, bring in something else first that appears unfair & not thought through & then later on withdraw it (as if one has listened) & then launch what you really wanted in the first place". Corporations as well as the government have been doing this for years. It's called management strategy. The revenue from Clause 24 is predicted by GO to only bring in £225m in 2018/19, £415m in 2019/20 & £665m thereafter from 2020/21. I perceive in its place could be a 1% pa property value tax payable by the property owner that is estimated could bring in £41.6bn (billion not million) plus a consumption or residence tax payable by tenants & OO's which would have brought in £9.9bn in 2012/13 which is more than twice the amount collected through CGT & combined is substantially more than what Council Tax brings in of only £25.9bn in 2012/13. And/or a tax on "Net" Wealth payable annually of anywhere between 0.3-1% on one's assets less liabilities & then we'll really be crying especially as many landlords may have unencumbered themselves to avoid being caught by Clause 24. The percentages sound small but the yearly revenue collected is enormous compared to what Clause 24 will bring in (and the amounts of revenue these taxes could bring in are only based on properties owned privately, with the intention to apply these taxes to companies & trusts too).