A Long-Term Strategy for Housing: Lessons Learned on the Role of Institutions and Governance

The UK Government has announced a £39 billion funding package and five-stage plan for social and affordable housing in England, with a comprehensive 10-year strategy due in 2025. This report reflects on the housing contexts of Scotland and England, drawing comparative lessons to strengthen institutional design, governance, and long-term planning for England’s housing policy.

It finds that while both nations face persistent challenges—supply shortages, affordability pressures, homelessness, fragmented responsibilities, and weak integration with wider policy—Scotland’s more coordinated governance, statutory housing rights, and stable planning frameworks provide useful contrasts. England’s reliance on market-led approaches, combined with short-term political cycles, inconsistent funding, and fragmented oversight, has undermined strategic capacity and delivery.

The analysis concludes that England requires systemic reform, including stronger institutions, empowered local authorities, cross-party commitment, and integrated governance structures, to ensure continuity, accountability, and long-term investment. Without such reforms, ambitious housing targets will continue to be missed; with them, a sustainable, equitable, and resilient housing system can be achieved.

Key messages

England’s pending 10-year housing strategy must move beyond short-term cycles by embedding stable governance, cross-departmental coordination, and independent oversight to provide the continuity and accountability needed for long-term housing reform.

To achieve resilient and equitable housing outcomes, England must empower local authorities with greater capacity and resources, secure multi-year investment certainty, and adopt systemic solutions that integrate supply, demand, finance, and governance.


Meet the Author

Linda Christie

Linda is an applied economist and strategic public policy professional with 25 years of varied policy and academic expertise, having delivered a range of projects of national significance. She trained as a government economist in the early part of her career, progressing on to head up economic development strategy at Glasgow City Council for over 10 years. Linda was Head of Scotland’s Green Skills Strategy at Skills Development Scotland, and latterly, Head of Programmes for Scotland’s Circular Economy Strategy at Zero Waste Scotland.

Publications

Business Cases and Place-Based Funding

This report critically examines the application of the Better Business Case Green Book model by practitioners when seeking to secure past place-based economic development funding. The business case framework is used to appraise and manage the development of an intervention, as set out in the HM Treasury’s Green Book guidance.

Valuing What Matters: Reclaiming Social Value for System Change

This policy brief argues that social value must be reclaimed as a driver of system change rather than reduced to compliance exercises. It outlines a stewardship approach across three dimensions – procurement, governance, and community voice – demonstrating how public spending can serve as anchor investment, align decision-making around a

Collaborative Innovation in Employment Policy: A Liverpool City Region Case Study

This policy briefing explores how the Liverpool City Region has sustained employment policy innovation across decades of national change. Drawing on programmes such as the City Strategy Pathfinder, Youth Employment Gateway, and Households into Work, it shows how trust-based relationships, boundary-spanning roles, and collaborative governance have acted as an ‘invisible