Housing delivery key driver for breaking up the HCA but local presence brought into question as organisation told to work on how it shows ‘best value’.
A government review of the Homes and Communities Agency (HCA) has recommended the separation of its regulatory and investments functions, resulting in the creation of a standalone social housing regulator.
In the review foreword, communities secretary Sajid Javid said the agency ‘must have a clear principal objective of delivering housing’. He said the review ‘signals significant change and a corresponding leadership challenge for the new chair and his team’. He added it also needs ‘to become more active in the land market, to enter and shape new markets through accelerated construction, and to drive delivery of new products such as shared ownership and starter homes’.
The creation of a standalone regulator is a ‘purely administrative change that will not affect the regulator’s powers or operations’, added housing minister Gavin Barwell.
The review found that the necessity of delivering at arm’s length from government ‘was clearest for the HCA’s regulatory function’. It had examined the potential conflict of interest created by the HCA in being a secured creditor of organisations which it regulates, following the evolution of HCA Investments.
It said the drawback of offering more autonomy ‘were clear’, and that ‘remaining in the HCA would not remove the risk of a conflict of interest, but, rather, reduce its likelihood of occurrence’.
The review had examined options for merging the regulatory function with another regulator or other body, but there was ‘a clear view that the character of the regulatory role did not lend itself to a merger with any other regulator’.
It also said merger ‘would have transition costs and would be more disruptive, given the complexities of bringing together organisations and the need to integrate distinct organisations in order to achieve operational savings’.
Some stakeholders pointed specifically to a weakening focus on the ‘communities’ aspect of its function over time.
The review said the HCA should review ‘which functions currently delivered in local operating areas can be delivered more efficiently and effectively as a central function’.
However, it also recommended that the HCA should develop - via its ongoing change programme and continuous improvement - a clearer focus on understanding and demonstrating best value, while the review ruled out merger with another regulatory body due to the ’ complexities of bringing together organisations’.
The review said that since the HCA began making recoverable investments, its governance arrangements and an operational ‘ethical wall’ have ensured that information is ‘not inappropriately exchanged between the regulator and the HCA Investment function which, in some cases, deals with registered providers as a creditor’.
Although some stakeholders supported the simplicity of a single agency, the review said it found ‘some concerns about the potential conflict of interest which has grown in significance since HCA-Investments was established in 2014’.
‘While there was no suggestion that any conflict has materialised, there has also been no significant test,’ it added.
‘A downturn in the housing market could provide that and the complexities of the HCA’s investment role and the regulated sector itself are also likely to increase over time.’
There was a ‘clear concern’ that incorporating the regulatory function into another organisation could result in a loss of focus on the sector or a change to the regulatory approach, the review said.
It added: ‘The current focus on economic regulation provides assurance in a sector with around £67bn of private debt and underpins the preferential lending rates available to registered providers which are crucial in supporting housing supply.’
There were interviews with comparator bodies, such as Charity Commission, Monitor and Housing Ombudsman, but they found ‘a clear lack of synergies with the regulator’s functions’. It said merging with the Housing Ombudsman, which is entirely focused on consumer regulation rather than economic regulation, would involve the creation of a non-sector specific regulatory body.
It is also recommended that it should review its local presence and what can be better delivered centrally. It will ‘keep its operating model at local level under review, particularly given ongoing devolution’.
RELATED