
Originally Posted by
scottieroader
I understand that it is your point of view that in a world where regulations are relaxed, all the people free from them will start collectively acting in society's best interests...
Not in everything, but yes in land and planning.
but I disagree with it. In my point of view relaxing regulations will benefit the big players more than that the small developers, and will not stop developers landbanking nor will it stop things such as buy-to-leave investors dictating the market and developers will still not care about things such as design, affordability and sustainability.
The UK is the only developed country where most of the houses are built by a few companies - the big players. It is clear houses are not affordable at all. The UK is always in a perennial housing crisis which need not be there. Look at the planning and land system and then see where the problems lay. Then think of how it could be rectified. Then look at how others do it - and there are some shining examples around.
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Once the land is feed up and planning relaxed the construction will be in the hands of the market and small builders. Currently planning is Stalinist using central quotas - which clearly does not work. Look at the links I gave and how Germany and Switzerland plan and use land. Understand what I wrote - get the points and read the links.
Also I still believe that unfair as it is, the flow of tax money towards wealthy landowners is not significant.
The flow of money to them is significant and just downright unjust and should be stopped ASAP. However that is not the main point. The point is that they hold most of the nations land and create via the planning system an artificial land shortage ramping up land prices and hence house prices.
And as far as greenbelts and the desire to keep towns seperate is concerned. I would like them to say seperate, I see no reason that just because something has happened in the past and would happen without intervention it should automatically be seen as just and acceptable.
I see no reason to stop natural migration. It can benefit communities merging into larger units - or shrinking too. Your view is just subjective and nothing else with basis what
I think where we disagree though is on wider issues and is not really reconcilable. So I'd rather draw a line under it and keep this topic on urbanism, and not stray into politics.
What issues bother you? What bothers me is that housing is poor in the UK and costs the earth. We live in small, poorly insulated pokey holes that cost a fortune. in general. Read what I wrote again that is clearly there. Then read the links too.
For the record (and I'm assuming here you are an advocate of Adam Smith) He and Marx (of whom I'm an advocate) aren't too dissimilar. I think it is erroneous the way many thinkers present Smith as the realist as opposed to Marx the idealist. They were both idealists, Smith spoke of a perfect market which in practice cannot exist.
I couldn't care about Smith and Marx. Again understand the issues presented and how it affects you and everyone else. They are clearly put forward. The people would clearly benefit greatly if Land & planning was in a free market, and not rigged to benefit large rich landowners and few very large construction companies. .
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