Councils now sell off more houses than they build. Thatcher’s legacy, right to buy, is a failure

Councils now sell off more houses than they build. Thatcher’s legacy, right to buy, is a failure

The right still reveres her flagship policy, but the repercussions are more homelessness, spiralling rents and bankrupt councils

Of all the policies imposed on Britain by Conservative governments, few have reshaped the country’s fortunes as enduringly as right to buy. For a lucky few, the policy has meant colossal windfalls and the chance to snap up some of the best properties in the country on the cheap. For the rest, right to buy has meant rising homelessness, spiralling rents and local authorities facing bankruptcy as the social housing stock dwindles, year by year.

In a mere four decades, Margaret Thatcher’s flagship initiative, forcing councils to sell off public housing at huge discounts, has seen two-thirds of British council homes privatised. City halls across the country are now on the brink of insolvency, in large part due to the enormous cost of having to provide temporary accommodation without enough council-owned homes left to go round.

Phineas Harper is a writer and curator

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