Skip to main content
Moving families into social housing would save £3bn a year, researchers find
A view of houses in Thamesmead, south east London

MINISTERS could slash housing benefit costs by £3 billion a year by moving all families with children on means-tested benefits into social housing, researchers say.

Much of the £32 billion currently spent by the government on housing support lines the pockets of private landlords, a report published today said.

New modelling by the Institute for Public Policy think tank found that moving these families would also reduce relative poverty by 200,000, while also helping to contain the ballooning cost of temporary accommodation.

The IPPR also recommended raising local housing allowance rates to the 30th percentile of rents and removing the household benefit cap from April. 

IPPR report author Henry Parkes said: “A safe, secure, and affordable home should be the foundation for every child’s future.

“Instead, too many families are trapped in a cycle of poverty and instability caused by unaffordable rents and insecure tenancies.

“Housing reform isn’t just a moral imperative — it’s an economic necessity.” 
 

The 95th Anniversary Appeal
Support the Morning Star
You can read five articles for free every month,
but please consider supporting us by becoming a subscriber.
More from this author
PCS conference
PCS conference / 21 May 2025
21 May 2025
starmer
Gaza / 21 May 2025
21 May 2025

Civil servants slam Starmer over continued support for Israel

mobiles
PCS conference / 21 May 2025
21 May 2025

Civil servants fear for their jobs following pledges to expand AI use

(From left) Sarah Morton, Fran Heathcote, Martin Cavanagh, Angela Grant, Andy Mitchell
PCS Conference 2025 / 20 May 2025
20 May 2025
Similar stories
Fans make their way to the stadium ahead of the Sky Bet Cham
Britain / 27 February 2025
27 February 2025
Rough sleeping in England rises in a year with record numbers of children crammed into B&Bs