HC Deb 08 June 1998 vol 313 cc429-30W
Mrs. Ewing

To ask the Secretary of State for Scotland what his Department's budget was for council and other publicly financed housing (i) in cash terms and (ii) in real terms, in 1998–99 prices and (iii) as a percentage of Scottish GDP each year since 1978–79; and how much was spent per council tenant and publicly financed housing tenant in Scotland in (i) cash terms and (ii) real terms, in 1998–99 prices, in each of these years. [43392]

Mr. Macdonald

[holding answer 2 June 1998]: The available information is set out in the table. To provide meaningful information relating expenditure on housing to GDP, it would be necessary to include not only housing expenditure by the Scottish Office but also other public housing expenditure including, in particular, Housing Benefit which has increased substantially over the period.

Given that Scottish Homes' grant in aid is used largely to support housing development by housing associations and private developers, it is not meaningful to divide the totals in the table by the numbers of public sector tenants in each year.

£ million
Year Scottish Office housing budget in cash terms 1,2 Column 2 at estimated 1998–99 prices
1978–79 542 1,760
1979–80 691 1,922
1980–81 738 1,736
1981–82 667 1,430
1982–83 616 1,233
1983–84 535 1,023
1984–85 516 940
1985–86 430 742
1986–87 457 766
1987–88 504 802
1988–89 434 647
1989–90 459 640
1990–91 539 696
1991–92 604 733
1992–93 536 624
1993–94 541 612
1994–95 552 615
1995–96 497 539
1996–97 449 474
1997–98 531 546
1998–99 508 508
1 The figures for the Scottish Office housing budget in columns 2 and 3 include Housing Support Grant, Housing Revenue Account capital allocations, Scottish Homes grant-in-aid (prior to 1989–90, expenditure on the Housing Corporation and Scottish Special Housing Association), allocations to the former New Town Development Corporations, and resources made available in 1997–98 and 1998–99 under the capital receipts initiative.
2 The figures exclude, however, repairs and improvement grants made by local authorities to owner occupiers, expenditure on Housing Benefit, local authorities' capital receipts and local authority capital funded from current revenue. They also exclude private sector investment levered in as a result of Scottish Homes' grants to housing associations and private developers.