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Jun 30, 2026

Burnham's wishful thinking on affordable housing: ALEX BRUMMER

The most refreshing aspect of the Andy Burnham economic prescription for Britain was his avoidance of ad nauseam attacks on Tory chaos.

There were even points of optimism about Britain’s science, innovation, and creativity. For those critical of Britain’s insistence on allowing overseas companies to bid for major new contracts, squeezing out domestic firms, there were encouraging words.

It is possible that a Number 10 North, based in Manchester, would more clearly see the impact of great chunks of British business disappearing into foreign and private equity hands under the noses of Keir Starmer and Rachel Reeves. Then again, pigs might fly.

Among firms under threat are budget airline easyJet, logistics and data centres group Segro and Unilever’s food arm.

Overseas ownership will mean decision-making moving abroad along with a slug of tax revenues. Forget British local and community control. Such deals will put executives in Minneapolis, San Francisco and Baltimore in charge.

Labour has stood by as control over vital public services such as the Royal Mail have fallen into the hands of a foreign marauder with service levels in shocking decline. 

Tax and spend: Prime Minister in waiting Andy Burnham, pictured, has announced his plans for  the 'biggest council house-building programme since the post-war period'

Tax and spend: Prime Minister in waiting Andy Burnham, pictured, has announced his plans for  the 'biggest council house-building programme since the post-war period'

Burnham desires state control over utilities, with Thames Water offering the most immediate challenge.

Yet moving Thames Water into special administration would immediately add a new debt pile onto a stressed government balance sheet.

There would be less chance of returning it to private control speedily if there were an insistence on state involvement.

Pleasing words of support for pubs, hospitality, and the High Street were heard from the presumptive Prime Minister.

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HOW THIS IS MONEY CAN HELP

There was no acknowledgement that net zero energy policies have raised costs to unacceptable levels. 

The same sectors have been bashed by the jump in employers’ national insurance and higher minimum wages. Business rates reform is critical but barely touches the sides.

Burnham has placed affordable housing at the core of his agenda. How short memories are. Reeves made housing the centrepiece of her growth plan. 

The 1.5m new homes pledged in this Parliament have moved ever further into the distance, with an estimated 300,000 or so certified in two years.

Capacity shortages, planning delays, and withdrawn help for first-time buyers have all seen production capsize. Lowering stamp duty might be a useful start. Hitting home-owners in the South East with ever higher property taxes won’t.

Debt bomb

A rebooted PM must live in the real world. An early reading recommendation is the just-released annual report of the Basel-based Bank for International Settlements (BIS). Those with memory of the great financial crisis will know the BIS saw it coming.

Concerns highlighted by the BIS are the oversized role of highly leveraged hedge funds in sovereign bond markets and an AI bubble. 

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