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Dáil Éireann debate -
Thursday, 12 Nov 1987

Vol. 375 No. 3

Housing Finance Agency (Amendment) Bill, 1987: Second Stage (Resumed).

Question again proposed: "That the Bill be now read a Second Time."

Before the Adjournment we had been reviewing the extent of the Government's failure to support both private and public housing in the period since March last. I hope we have established the fact of the abolition of the £5,000 surrender grant in conjuction with the abolition of the £2,250 new house grant, the house improvement grants and the drastic reduction in the proposed allocation for local authority capital housing finance for next year, together with the measures outlined in the Minister's speech today in introducing this Bill. The Minister has explained that for the first time ever since before the State was founded the local authorities are going to be forced to withdraw from giving loans to people of modest income at a guaranteed interest rate, which provided a set standard identifiable repayment over the lifetime of the annuity. Instead those people will be forced to seek funding from the financial institutions and only in the event of failure to gain approval will they be able to turn back to the local authority funding system. However, even at that they will have to pay a variable interest rate on the loan. I believe that the combination of those measures, compounded by the establishment of a variable interest rate for SDA loans will mean a sharp decline in the number of people of modest income who will feel it within their ability to take on the very onerous task of endeavouring to purchase their own house. I should have said, before Question Time intervened, that this year we have witnessed a reduction of 10 per cent in mortgage interest relief granted to people who have obtained loans for the purpose of building or buying their own house. A real fear has been expressed by the financial institutions, the local authorities, the building industry, et al, that there is every likelihood that the mortgage interest relief will be reduced furthere and even abolished in the course of future budgets. I cannot believe that the combination of all those measures can do otherwise than to force those who are uncertain as to their future employment prospects and who are on modest income to shy away from taking on the very definite burden of repaying house purchase loans over 20 years or more. The combination of the measures which have been announced already and which the Minister is compounding today will have the effect of frightening off many people who would otherwise raise the necessary finance through these traditional methods or through the HFA loans.

As I have mentioned in this House on several occasions, Ireland holds a record which we do not often speak about, of having the highest percentage of home ownership in the world — 84 per cent of Irish people either own or are in the process of buying their own houses. The nearest country to us in those terms is one which has many other similarities to ours and that is New Zealand. They are so proud of their percentage of home ownership, 3 per cent or 4 per cent below our figure, that they took the trouble to send their relevant Government Minister to Ireland in the past few years to see why we have been more successful than they were. At that time we were able to outline to them the range of measures to which I have referred, all of which had gone a long way towards helping people to achieve the very definite and established desire of the Irish people to buy their own homes. That is a desire that probably has been established through the evolution of our history and is one of the strongest desires of the Irish people.

The previous Government had recognised that desire and put in place a range of measures to ensure that anyone who aspired to that ideal would be facilitated, aided and encouraged by the Government. Those measures have been rapidly and steadily dismantled since March of this year. One of the more regrettable records of malperformance on the part of this Government has been in the area of housing, in direct house building, the funding of the housing agencies and encouragement for the private house building sector.

Previous attempts have been made to gain commitments from the financial institutions and the banks to provide funding for people in these income categories. An arrangement was made with those institutions ten or 12 years ago when they promised to provide such funds but their delivery fell far short of their promise of commitment. I would be interested to see to what extent the institutions, and especially the banks, will participate in the manner which has been outlined.

I would like the Minister to clarify another matter. When his senior Minister announced this proposal he was reported in The Irish Press on 28 October 1987 as saying, in regard to the moneys which are now to be replaced through the involvement of the institutions and societies and which would be released from the public capital programme — £50 million to £55 million — that he wanted savings made to release capital to fund other projects. In the press release that was issued on the previous day the Minister said that these arrangements would enable the Government to reduce the public capital provision for local authority loans in 1988 while, at the same time, maintaining the availability of mortgage funds for house purchasers of modest means.

I have referred earlier to the apparent duplicity of the Government in publishing Estimates of the public capital programme just a fortnight before this announcement and showing the level of funding for house purchase loans as £155 million. Quite an amount of confusion has been caused by the Minister informing The Irish Press that the moneys which would be replaced would be released to fund other capital projects. That seems to be directly in contradiction to the press release which seemed to suggest that it represents a further reduction in the public capital programme. I would like the Minister to refer to this when he is replying and let us know whether the moneys are to be diverted or whether the result will be an overall further reduction in the public capital programme. If the moneys are to be diverted, the Minister should clarify whether they will be diverted in the area of voted or non-voted public capital.

I am puzzled by the fact that the Minister of State today and the press release indicate that the quid pro quo, the consideration given by the institutions for becoming involved in this arrangement with the Department of the Environment, is that there is a form of limited guarantee given to the societies in the event of bad debts. Such a guarantee implicitly carried a certain element of cost. Societies do not look for a guarantee unless they expect they may be at the loss of money and the person giving the guarantee has to make some assumption that there will be some call on the guarantee. In the context of a range of loans and borrowers it is not only quite likely but it is 100 per cent certain that there will be an amount of default. The Irish Press of 28 October stated that Deputy Flynn maintained that the new scheme would cost the Exchequer nothing. How can a guarantee given to cover the cost of bad debts cost the Exchequer nothing? The Minister might explain when replying how the State can guarantee 50 per cent of bad debts at no cost to the Exchequer.

The income-related loans advanced by the Housing Finance Agency since their inception in 1982 are indicative of the level of fall-off in demand by people of modest income for funding for house purchase this year. In 1982 they advanced £15 million; in 1983, £55 million; in 1984, £71 million; in 1985, £91 million and in 1986, £78 million, covering something in the order of 17,000 loans by the end of 1986. Yet, in the first six months of 1987 the Housing Finance Agency had advanced £3.5 million only. Is there any greater indication of the failure of the Government's policy to provide income and incentives for people of modest means to purchase their own houses than that dramatic evaporation of demand in the course of six months?

In fairness, there is obviously a higher takeup in the SDA loans. For the first time this year, in accordance with the package I mentioned we put in place last year, the Housing Finance Agency have begun to provide some of the funding for SDA loans. In 1985 £71 million was advanced and in 1986, £85 million. This year, for the first time the HFA began to provide some of the funding and in the first half of the year they provided £65 million. But even if one combines the £65 million with the paltry £3.5 million and extends that sum to what presumably ought apply, for the remainder of 1987 it is quite clear that that comes to about £137 million advanced between the HFA and SDA annuity loans this year and based on the figures for the first six months as opposed to £163 million advanced through the same vehicles last year. Remember that the demand for annuity loans is now likely to be substantially less because of the introduction from this month or next month onwards of variable interest rates.

None of these items was adverted to by the Minister and there are five or six specific questions I would like him to answer. First, to what extent has the loan switching arrangement been achieved from short term borrowing to conventional borrowing in a range of financial instruments which I mentioned, borrowing which the agency were empowered to undertake in the summer of 1986 so as to reduce the extent of their short term indebtedness from the £150 million or so which they had been exposed to? Secondly, to what extent has that been achieved by utilising foreign funding at a more attractive interest rate than borrowing in domestic punts would result in? Thirdly, if that has not been achieved to any substantial degree, why? Is there some prohibition or bar on the use of those foreign funds?

Fourthly, if the suggested reduction by the Minister of about £50 million in the public capital programme through the arrangement of utilising the other financial institutions comes in place, is that money to be switched to other capital projects and other capital Votes or is it to represent a further reduction in the public capital programme? If it is to go to other capital Votes in fairness to the House and in view of the fact that the Estimates have been published for some weeks, the House ought to be informed as to where that additional funding is to go. Fifthly, in relation to the guarantees being given by the Minister to the financial institutions, how can he say that these guarantees cost nothing and, lastly, in relation to the drastic and radical reduction in the provision of capital for local authority housing in 1987 of £37 million off a base of £87 million, would the Minister be in a position now to inform the House as to how many new local authority houses will be started next year?

It is, all in all, a pretty sorry picture to see, in the space of eight months, the dismantling of a comprehensive housing policy which had achieved the lowest levels of applicants for local authority housing for a substantial length of time, which had put in place a range of loans attractive to a variety of people of modest means in different ways depending on their circumstances, which has put in place a range of grant-aided incentives to people of modest means to buy, build or improve their own houses and which had also put in place a singularly successful scheme to encourage people living in rented local authority dwellings or purchased local authority dwellings to surrender their dwellings in return for a special incentive grant to enable them to purchase a private sector house and release the local authority dwelling for reallocation to someone on the local authority housing list. The combination of all those things had achieved the happy housing position we were in, in March of this year. I invite the House to consider what these statistics will be and what the inevitable trend will be in March of next year.

The Housing Finance Agency was established six years ago to facilitate people who were above the income limit for an SDA loan and who found it difficult to get finance from a bank or a building society. The original idea was to issue inflation linked mortgages to help people to buy homes in times of high inflation. An inflation linked mortgage would have a low rate of interest but the amount of the loan outstanding would rise each year with inflation so that the repayments would also rise at this rate, leading to the repayments being a more stable percentage of income throughout the period of the mortgage. The structure of the loan made it impossible for borrowers to benefit from the reduced interest rates in recent years. This has lead to people paying sizeable amounts more than the conventional borrower had to pay. This scheme was designed to work in times of high inflation but has proved itself unsuitable for today's economic climate. This unsuitability has also been reflected in the difficulties experienced on a grand scale by the agency.

It is obvious that if the Housing Finance Agency was to continue and if the idea of providing mortgages for low income borrowers was to survive, major changes would have to be made in the financing of the agency. In this context the proposals contained in the Bill are to be welcomed. Reservations must be expressed however about the section that empowers the Minister to contribute towards the cost of the agency. Last year the agency was given a grant of £7 million, this year a grant of £9 million and for next year there is an estimated grant of £11 million. It was always the aim that this agency should be self financing. I would like to ask the Minister when he foresees this coming about.

I would like to welcome this new scheme in so far as it reduces substantially the public capital programme but I share a lot of the reservations expressed already about fluctuating interest rates of banks and building societies. My own experience is that people in this position would prefer to go to a local authority with a fixed rate of interest rather than to a bank or a building society at fluctuating rates.

I would also like to share Deputy Boland's concern about the new scheme which involves a State guarantee and to ask the Minister to provide some indication of the predicted cost of this guarantee.

I am sorry that the Minister of State has been obliged to come in to do what really is the dirty work of his senior Minister in relation to this area because I know from his contributions in this House in the past that he has a genuine concern for the housing needs of people in our society. Ministers of State have often been described as the mudguards of Ministers when it comes to the dirty work that has to be done, and there is a lot of dirty work being done by this Government. This Minister, whom I know on a personal basis, has been sent in on a very distasteful task, no matter what way he read out the script and no matter how well it might have been written for him so many comments I wish to make are in no way personally directed towards him because, frankly, I do not hold him accountable for what is now being put before the House and I certainly do not hold him accountable for the housing circular which has been circulated to every local authority. What it effectively means, from this new right, born again, fundamenta list Fianna Fáil Party which has discovered fiscal rectitude with a vengeance, is the dismantling of that elaborate and successful package of house financing measures to which Deputy Boland referred in his extensive contribution, and its replacement with a poor law-mentality means-tested system in the most humiliating way possible.

But the Government party, of which the Minister of State, Deputy Connolly, is a member, are now asking people to prove not once but twice that they cannot get a loan, not just in a verbal sense in front of some young person across the counter in the local building society office in a town or city around the country, but in writing, somebody else typing it out and the manager of the building society confirming it.

I thought that the party of the people which Fianna Fáil so frequently hold themselves to be had moved a little away from that kind of Victorian, extraordinarily regressive attitude. I am not surprised the Progressive Democrats have, in essence, welcomed this. It falls into line with their philosophy that unless people are manifestly poor and on the side of the ditch they are not entitled to State support, that is, unless they want to get voluntary health cover to go to Blackrock Clinic; that is a different thing altogether. In this instance, I am appalled that a Fianna Fáil Party which once upon a time in the thirties had a good record on housing, should be systematically putting, nail by nail, bolt by bolt, the lid firmly on the coffin of what was the most successful housing policy in the world, that is, measured by comparison with its achievements relative to other countries. As Deputy Boland has already stated, we ranked four or five points higher than our nearest competitor and that was the emerging state of New Zealand where there were not the historical housing pressures we had. Yet, we rated higher than they did. We had an extraordinarily high rate of 84 per cent of people owning their own homes.

This House will have all the time it needs to unravel this, but we are being asked systematically to dismantle a major support of the Irish building industry which, in turn, provides substantial employment. We are being asked to do that on the basis of a non-stated, non-explicit policy because the words contained in the Minister's speech do not reveal what is implied behind them. To begin, the Housing Finance Agency with which this measure is concerned, but the housing market in general with which that agency was set up to deal, has to address the question of housing demand and to respond to demands for accommodation from those who, through no fault of their own, are unable to pay the full market value of a mortgage but who are capable, provided they get some assistance with contributions from the State, of housing themselves. If they do not have that assistance, they are obliged to fall back on the local authority for housing.

On 14 October of this year, at the beginning of this session. I put down two written questions to the Department of the Environment for reply. The first question was to ask the Minister for the Environment regarding each local authority housing authority the present number of applicants on (a) the housing list, (b) the transfer list and (c) the senior citizens' housing list and if he would make a statement on the matter. I got a comprehensive reply, for which I thank the Minister, covering every local authority by county and even going into every urban district council. The total was 20,637 people who were not tenants of the local authority and who were looking for houses and a further 10,027 people were tenants but were looking for a transfer, presumably on grounds of need of extra accommodation or dissatisfaction with what they had. Of those 20,637,25 per cent, or 4,511 to be precise, were senior citizens, so there was a special need for housing for the elderly, which has certain physical characteristics.

I want to thank the Minister and his officials for going to the trouble of providing these details. They were so comprehensive, down to a place like Kinsale where they could tell me that 18 people were on the application list; nobody was looking for a transfer and eight of those 18 people were elderly. I commend the Minister's efficiency and his Department's co-operation in relation to providing these statistics.

I asked another question on the same day with the same degree of notice, which was as follows: to ask the Minister for the Environment if he would outline for each housing authority (a) the number of dwellings units to be completed in 1988, (b) the number of new starts to be commenced in 1988 and (c) the number of people expected to be employed in the achievement of (a) and (b) and if he would make a statement on the matter. From the same Department that could tell me the number of elderly people in Kinsale and in every other little town who wanted a house, from this marvellous apparatus of efficiency down in the Custom House, what reply did I get to the second question? The Minister for State at the Department of the Environment, Deputy G. Connolly said: "The information requested by the Deputy is not available in my Department at this stage".

I shall not delay this House and the Minister will have another day in which to reply but that reply to that question, in my knowledge of the Department, was at worst a lie and at best misleading. That information was available and remains available in the Custom House.

I do not like interrupting the Deputy but I must tell the Acting Chairman that the word "lie" has been used against my Department officials. I am a long standing Member of this House and I would never try to mislead or to tell an untruth. There will be, in due course, time for the Minister or myself to reply in detail to the Deputy. My record will show that I give good news and bad news. I am not afraid to give bad news, but I resent the word "lie" because it implies, as far as the officials of the Department of the Environment are concerned, something which I cannot accept.

Having regard to the remarks I made at the outset of my contribution in this House and knowing the Deputy, who is a Member of long standing in this House, I unreservedly withdraw the accusation that he was in any way lying to the House, but in so doing I am formally offering him the opportunity to contradict, or perhaps update, the answer I received from him on 14 October last.

The Minister has given that assurance and I thank you for your co-operation in withdrawing that remark. I would prefer that you did not start qualifying that withdrawal.

I am withdrawing it unreservedly and at the same time stitching into the record the facts as I hold them in my hand. I got two replies——

That remark applies to the officials of my Department. I do not mind about myself so much, but I do mind about the officials of my Department. I hold them in high esteem and respect their integrity. That is the way I see it. I am able to defend myself both inside and outside this House. I shall take on anyone on any platform anywhere at any time but I resent the accusation that I misled and, above all, that I was telling a lie. I would never do that. I accept the Deputy's apology.

With reservation.

There is no reservation.

I withdraw the remark.

The Deputy accused me of lying in that reply and accused my officials likewise. I have to resent it. It is unfair.

Acting Chairman

The Deputy has withdrawn the remark.

He did not withdraw it in so far as my officials are concerned.

Acting Chairman

He said unreservedly and I assume that means he is withdrawing the allegation against yourself and against the officials of your Department.

I accept that.

Let me say that at no stage did I imply the officials did not answer the question. It is quite clear it is the Minister of State or the Minister who is responsible for parliamentary questions. I well know that. I find it extraordinary that a Minister who has the resources of an extremely competent and well staffed Department could, on the one hand, go to the extraordinary detail of telling us who was looking for houses which was information he could have got only from a local authority while on the other hand, when asked to give the other side of the equation, information which he could have got from the same local authority, all he could say was that the information requested was not available in his Department at that stage. Both questions were answered on the same day.

At that stage.

The Minister is well aware of the conventions which suggest that that answer could have gone on to be completed in a variety of ways. It could have indicated that when the information became available it would be communicated or it could have suggested to the Deputy to put down a question at a later date. The reply gave no such undertaking nor made no such suggestion. Let me give the reason why.

During the term of office of the previous Administration the local authorities constructed between 6,500 and 7,000 new dwelling units each year. Therefore, with a waiting list of over 20,000, there is a three year demand for housing. Allowing for certain distortions in the figures, if we were to get it down to a two year demand it would amount to a very welcome reduction especially when we consider the housing crises of the sixties and early seventies. That is the background against which any changes in the operation of the Housing Finance Agency have to be measured.

I introduce that item at the outset of my contribution to this Second Stage debate because we cannot measure fully the intentions of what is proposed in this Bill until we look at the overall demand for housing. It is correct to say that the nature of the demand for housing is changing, that in some respects it has been reduced.

That refers only to new house starts. It does not refer in any way to the management of the housing stock for which the Minister and the Department have overall responsibility. There is possibly a three year demand for local authority dwellings and 25 per cent of those who are looking for new houses are elderly people who possibly are physically incapacitated or disabled in some way and who cannot enjoy the comforts of the homes they presently occupy. Despite that fact the Government have decided to reduce the capital provision from a figure of £87 million in 1987 to a figure of £50 million in 1988.

I put it to the Minister that the reason I got a non-answer to my second question of 14 October was because the Minister is aware that there will be no new housing starts in any local authority area in 1988. He received this information from the local authorities. It has been available for a long time to those in the Custom House. The Department of Finance sent a diktat to them, outlining the position. Therefore, there will be no new house starts in 1988 and allowing for a construction period of 18 months which is perhaps being optimistic, there will be a massive fall-off in house completions in 1989. Therefore the present three year waiting list will be lengthened to a waiting period of perhaps four or four and a half years and in some local authority areas, five years. Here, I am talking about national averages. The figure will be higher in some areas than in others.

It is against that background the Government are now coldly, systematically and knowingly embarking on a manufactured, engineered housing crisis despite what the Minister said in the reply which was that the information which was requested by me was not available in his Department at that stage. What we are witnessing now is a relaunching of the housing crisis by the Government. This will hit the decks in one to two years' time and it will affect most those people who are not able to buy a house of their own.

At present there are 250,000 unemployed and we are talking about an average of new house completions in the order of 6,500. Those on low incomes cannot raise the money which would enable them to buy a house. That is the base line from which we should start. This rather innocuous Bill does not propose to do very much. It is in Victorian English which emanated from the former centre of colonial administration in this country. I have often wondered whether some of the ethos of that period has embedded itself deeply into the walls of the Customs House and whether at times, perhaps during the times of the occupation of the Ministerial office by certain people, it resurfaces again like dry-rot recurring to infect the minds, attitudes and hearts of those who are there. Mind you, since most of those in the housing section are located in O'Connell Bridge House that analogy may not apply but perhaps it even transfers itself across the river.

When the information is made available to me I will have to tell some of those who are on the waiting list of 20,000 and who are depending on a local authority house that that list is going to become longer as no new house starts are planned for 1988, that they will have to wait for at least one more year before they will be given a house and that their only alternative will be to try to buy houses of their own. According to this circular they will have to prove positive to the satisfaction of the Minister, the finance office and the relevant local authority that not only are they not capable of obtaining a loan from a building society but that they are also unable to obtain a loan from a bank.

Does the Minister not trust the building societies, does he not accept their word? In a letter from a building society saying that Brian O'Brien or Mary Murphy, having regard to their level of incomes, are not eligible to qualify for a loan, not good enough? Is the Irish Permanent Building Society distrusted by the officials in the Customs House and has a letter from one of their branch managers got to be corroborated by a letter from the bank manager of one of the AIB branches? What kind of thinking produced this? What kind of doubting Thomases exist in the Department or in the Department of Finance? Why do two letters have to be obtained from financial institutions before, as Deputy Boland has said, a person can even fill out an application for a loan?

The Minister is not exactly encouraging people to try to house themselves with the aid of a local authority loan. No one likes being refused in respect of an application for a loan or for anything else. We are all human. A person in need of housing needs as much encouragement and support as he or she can get. The purchase of a house is the most important and largest financial transaction that most people will ever embark upon and this category particularly will be doing it for the first time. Many of us who have been over the tracks in advising constituents or dealing with people professionally can handle all the uncertainties and all the doubts quite readily. That is part of our in-course training so to speak, but a young or not so young couple who have never previously been down this road, by contrast with what their brothers and sisters may have experienced in the past two to three years, now realise suddenly that all support systems, the vast majority if not all of the measures, have been eroded, reduced, denied or cancelled. Not only is the support system significantly reduced and denied to them but in its place have been put two new round hoops through which they must jump and if they do not land on the other side with a letter from a building society and a bank they will not be eligible even to have their application entertained.

Suppose a person comes to the Minister with a letter from a building society to the effect that, "This person, Brian O Briain"— for example —"qualifies for a loan but, having regard to his income we can give him a loan of only £10,000 or £12,000", where is he then? He has a letter which says that he qualifies for a loan, but what can one buy with £12,000 in a new house market? Is he then eligible for a balancing loan from the SDA fund through the Housing Finance Agency or the local authority? Suppose the manager of a building society refuses, saying he is too busy and tells the person to come back next week? There is no provision for that in housing circular H10/87. There is no guidance or direction to a young housing officer in a local authority as to what might happen to somebody in the town of Birr who is told by the building society or a bank that he or she might qualify for a kind of loan, a full loan, £12,000 or thereabouts, but not a loan, sufficient to enable him to buy a house or to bring him within reach of closing the gap between the purchase price and the loan by way of either family support or a short term loan from the credit bank by way of an extended deposit.

The Bill before us is designed to give effect to this housing circular. The housing circular is administrative gobbledygook at its worst. All the major building societies are listed as well as the three banks who are eligible to certify that a person does not qualify for a loan. Nowhere is it indicated, justified or argued that one such letter will suffice. Two are needed. This Government who promised us a better way in so many other ways are now telling people who are going to be driven into the private housing market by the systematic reduction in an engineered housing crisis because of the reduction on the local authority side, that instead of being eased off the present waiting list they will have to jump through two hoops. There are enormous numbers of questions to which at least five housing officers in five local authorities to whom I have spoken have not been able to get answers from the Department of the Environment. The circular has gone out in the name of Mr. Dolan. The press release which accompanied it went out in the name of Mr. Macken. Mr. Dolan is an assistant principal officer in the housing administration section. Many of the answers that have been sought for clarification are simply not available because they are being referred to what is in the circular. This Bill, now at Second Stage, is designed to give effect to this circular. These questions need to be answered and the Minister will have ample time in which to answer them.

This Bill is a sleight-of-hand measure in that finances are being laundered to present the figures to the financial institutions in a manner that puts the best side forward. It is extraordinary how conscious this Government are of their own image in making things look as good as possible when they are talking to somebody else and how disastrous they are making matters for applicants for a loan when they are talking to potential recipients. On the one hand the beneficiaries of this con job, the people who are to get a loan, must humiliate themselves publicly with two letters stating that they do not qualify for a loan. On the other hand the Government are trying to launder the figures and create the impression that by some extraordinary feat of fiscal management they have been able to reduce demand for public capital loans by an enormous amount. They have done that by shifting it into the building societies and the banks.

The banks benefit already from two types of securities in relation to a house loan. They benefit from the fact that they hold the title deeds of the property. No lending institution gives more than 90 per cent of a loan, and that is 90 per cent of their valuation of the property not necessarily of the purchase price. Therefore, the bank as security No. 1 have the title deeds of the property as security against the loan they offer and there is a minimum margin of 10 per cent cash cover between what they lend out and what they hope to receive. In some cases if they are uneasy that minimum is even higher in order to cover themselves against a fall-off in the purchase or retail price. On top of that they limit the amount of money they will lend to anybody so as not to overstretch the capacity of an individual to repay, and it varies depending on the size of the income from two to 2.5 or three times the annual income of the person. That annual income is not what the person says he is earning; it is what his P45 and P60 state he earned in the last year. That is the security the banks and building societies already have. In order to assist in the repayment of that mortgage the taxpayer, the PAYE worker who does not own property, through the taxation system gives an indirect subsidy called mortgage interest relief to a maximum of around £3,800. These securities are already in place.

On top of that, this Government want to subsidise further and reduce the risk to building societies to 50 per cent of any loss they might experience by way of bad debt. I do not have any fundamental objection to that approach. In many respects it has a degree of efficiency which I welcome. We should, however, recognise that the building societies and the banks are doing nobody any favours in relation to this measure. In so far as risk exists at all, it is being taken out of the system by virtue of the guarantee. They will then take the cream of the applicants who have been driven off the local authority housing list because of the engineered housing crisis over which Fianna Fáil are presiding. They will further reduce the risk so that at worst they will have a minimum amount of default, 50 per cent of which will be covered by us, the taxpayers and, at best, they will have no default at all. We, the taxpayers — the banks do not rush to join us in that category — will then have to carry in the total portfolio of house loans under the local authority umbrella, the majority of bad risks, the majority of vulnerable people whose income, either because of its stability or because of its quantum size, is such that they will always be a risk in relation to defaulting on a mortgage. Why are we doing that? What has happened in the housing market which has forced us to do it?

I predict that in a year or two the Minister of State, if he is still an officeholder in that Department, will come into this House and say that the State cannot manage housing loans. He will be supported by the Progressive Democrats, with all the fervour of the born-again New Right Adam Smith economists. Some genius will say that local authority house mortgagees have a higher percentage of default and failure than people who borrow from building societies; therefore, the State is inefficient and the private sector is efficient. Some lunatic will make that argument within the next 18 months, on the basis of figures produced here in reply to questions which will be fully answered. There will be a further attack on local authority loans on the grounds that they are inefficient and basically do not work or that the housing officials in local authorities do not know how to run their affairs. It will follow from that that somebody in O'Connell Bridge House will say the reason is that local authorities are not smart enough to run the system and that they should run it themselves. That is the path we are following.

The timescale in the housing market is of necessity slower and of a longer duration than in most other areas because of the time it takes to put together a response to a housing demand by the acquisition of land and the delivery of the finished object, the house. I am not using words wildly. Within the licence of parliamentary debate I am saying to the Minister of State and the Department of the Environment, who have an exemplary record in the area of housing, that they are now writing the first chapter of an engineered housing crisis, the harvest of which we will see in a year to two in varying degrees in different parts of the country. Why? It is designed to launder the figures. There is no other reason. It is in order to shift columns of money and accountability from one channel to another. If ever people were entitled to say that the gnomes of Zurich, to use Harold Wilson's famous phrase, and those people responsible for high finance were manipulating people's lives in order to present a good set of fiscal figures, this is the occasion on which it could be said. This is not merely an amending Bill. The Housing Finance Agency was opposed by Fianna Fáil in the first instance. This is something fundamental which will have a very damaging effect on the morale and ability of local authority officials to run their affairs in the housing area.

The way we have succeeded in housing our people has undoubtedly been one of the success stories of our society in recent times, especially in regard to the quality of houses we have provided. Some would say we have overdone it, that we have been profligate with local authority housing, that perhaps it is almost too good and that people do not deserve such good houses. The last Minister to use that kind of argument was Deputy Robert Molloy, now born again in the Progressive Democrats. He brought in the ingenious idea of low-cost housing. The Minister of State is no doubt familiar with the efficiency of low-cost housing. It is so efficient that we now have to knock it down. The repairs to it are more expensive than the original erection cost. The Leas-Cheann Comhairle is familiar with low-cost housing in his own constituency in South Finglas. It is so efficient that the end gable houses in parts of the Tolka valley have one door and no fireplace. The were cheap because the Minister's party regard the people who live in them as being cheap as well. This Bill is cheap and this approach is cheap because the Government are looking for a con trick to satisfy people in the Department of Finance.

That is not in accord with what were once the housing traditions of the Fianna Fáil Party. I am saddened that during the term of office of a Fianna Fáil Minister in O'Connell Bridge House they have retreated before the onslaught of the Department of Finance. Everybody knows the banks are flush with cash. This is designed to entice the banks into a secure market where there is adequate cover in terms of the title deeds to the property in question, in terms of the ratio of income to the gross lending and the percentage of the acquisition cost. If there was not adequate cover as far as the banks or the Department of the Environment were concerned why not have let them step in and bridge that gap? That has not been the case and instead the Department are underwriting to the tune of 50 per cent of any losses they might suffer. They are distorting the portfolio of loan applications in such a way that we will get the argument in a couple of years time, if not sooner, that local authorities are incapable of managing a loan portfolio because of the higher percentage of defaulters on local authority loans than on loans taken out with building societies.

The housing circular 10/87 was issued on 28 October. I understand that there are approximately 32 major local housing authorities and it would not take a lot to rewrite that circular and issue it to them. There are many very good graduates in English and economics in the Custom House who could do that. In the interests of the efficiency of the economy the Department should draft a set of criteria for applicants for local authority loans. Officials in local authorities on reading those guidelines on eligibility could assess whether a person was eligible for a local authority loan. It would not be necessary then for an applicant to go down the street and knock up the agent of the Irish Permanent Building Society or approach a bank manager in whose branch they may not have an account. The official in the local authority, having regard to the guidelines produced by the Department — I presume officials in the Department are capable of producing a set of guidelines and figures — could apply them in principle with decency and humanity to a housing applicant who has given up the ghost about getting a house from a local authority because of the cancellation of new starts in 1988. If that person was told by an official of a local authority that he or she did not qualify they would have to take the only other course of action open to them, to hold out for a long time for a house.

Is there some ideological objection to such an approach? Is it that the Minister does not trust local authority officials to apply the guidelines? If that is the case the Minister's colleague in the Department of Health has shown gay abandon in trusting the officials of health boards to apply a similar process in relation to medical cards. Why is it that we do not apply the same logic to applicants for medical card. Why is it that we do not get such applicants, before they fill up their forms, to go down the main street of Birr, Portlaoise or some other town to get a certificate from a bank manager or a building society to state that they are or they are not eligible for a loan? A medical card holder arguably could cost the State more over a period of time than might a local authority tenant or a local authority home loan. The fiscal risk to the bureau in Merrion Street is not any different. In terms of high finance the risk to the State is no greater.

Is it the position that officials of the Department of the Environment and the Department of Health do not talk to each other? Once upon a time the Department of Health was located in the same building as the Department of the Environment, the Custom House. How is it possible that some officials going in and out of the same hall door daily can trust local authority members and officials of health boards to apply criteria in relation to medical cards when across the corridor, or on another floor, other officials do not trust such people? Why is it that those officials do not consider local authority members or officials capable of applying those criteria and that they must prove positive that a person is ineligible for a loan? Why is it that they insist on getting a certificate from a building society? In fact they do not trust building societies because they are also seeking a written certificate from a bank. This is a patent nonsense and the Minister knows it.

If "Hall's Pictorial Weekly" were to run this it would be humorous and TAM ratings might improve but the Department are making jokes of the lives of some people. They are turning their hardship and horror into a type of perverse humour or, alternatively, the officials who drafted the circular I referred to have been so terrorised by the Department of Finance that they will agree to anything. What has happened in the Department of the Environment that suddenly has put them in the position that they know something about the banks or the building societies that we do not? Is there a crisis or are those institutions not run properly?

In each local authority a person could produce a tax certificate as proof when applying for a loan but now applicants must produce two further pieces of paper. There will have to be somebody to confirm that the additional pieces of paper have been submitted. When the auditors from the Department of the Environment carry out their annual checks they will have to ensure that not only were the loans properly given out but that the applicants were properly qualified. They will have to check that all pieces of paper were submitted. This will result in more demands on local authority staff. We must remember that local authorities will be part of the 15,000 redundancies, which for the time being are voluntary, being sought by the Government.

At a time when the Government are reducing the number of personnel in local authorities the Department are giving them extra unnecessary work. There is no justification for that. It is clear that there is some other reason involved in the Department making it as difficult as possible for people to get loans. If obstacles are put in the way of a race we are doing one of two things, trying to slow the person down or trying to see how high that person can jump. I know that the Minister of State, Deputy Connolly, does not want to see how high the homeless can jump and I would not for one moment impute that motive to him but the circular will discourage, slow down, prevent and dishearten people who might otherwise apply for a loan from a local authority. When we strip away the verbiage, when we strip away the con job of moving the figures from one column to the other, and the laundering of the public capital borrowing programme we will find that that is the motivation behind the circular.

There is no doubt that the circular was not drafted by a person who attended an organisation and management course. It was not cleared by the consultants on efficiency within the public service and it certainly was not drawn up by a systems analyst. Such officials did exist in the Department of the Environment and it was normal in the past to consult with such professionals on these matters. Local authorities should have been consulted to ensure that difficult jobs were not made more difficult.

There was no reference to this matter in the Minister's speech. It seems that not only have the Department of the Environment reneged on the local authority waiting list which consists of 20,000 people, reneged on the 10,000 people on the transfer waiting list and on the 4,000 people of the 20,000 who are elderly and need special housing. I wonder why the Department have decided to introduce a measure which will make it more difficult for people to get local authority loans at a time when they have reduced the supply of local authority houses to one category of people. They are forcing people to traipse up and down a town to get a letter from a bank or a building society — in some cases both letters. I wonder why it is necessary to do that.

Debate adjourned.
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