Planning approvals rose in June ahead of the general election, reaching nearly £7.5bn in value, according to Barbour ABI analysts

Planning approvals saw a welcome rise in June ahead of the general election, reaching $9.6bn(around £7.5bn) in value.

This was a 14% increase from June 2023 and a 30% increase from May, according to Barbour ABI’s latest analysis.

Medical & healthcare played a large part with the £700m Monklands Hospital Replacement Project getting the green light, however residential approvals were also up 103% for June – the highest in over 18 months.

The approval of a 1500 house development in Manchester played a key part of the rise.

Labour campaigned heavily on planning reform

Ed Griffiths, head of business and client analytics at Barbour ABI commented: “Keir Starmer’s Labour Party has pledged to unlock the planning system to build 1.5m homes during the current parliament, so this uplift in approvals will come as welcome news to the incoming government.

“Labour ran on promises of changing planning policy and energy reform, but any announcements will take a while before they impact shovels in the ground. As a result, business confidence will play a key part in the early days of the government. In particular, we may see more activity in Residential and Green Energy sectors now the election has been decided.”

Hesitation ahead of the election slowed planning applications in May

Planning applications in May continued to fall as stasis gripped the industry ahead of the election. Overall, application value was down 12% from May 2023 and was at its lowest for over 18 months. Residential and Infrastructure, the two highest value sectors, continued to feel the squeeze, falling 16% and 6% respectively from the previous month.

Griffiths continued, “Looking ahead, all eyes will be on planning applications following the election. Businesses have long been holding off committing to new projects due to political and economic uncertainty, so this is where we should see the biggest shifts if Labour’s victory turns out to be the news the industry was waiting for.”

Contracts Awards were unstable in June, falling 16% overall from last month.

A disappointing month after a positive May saw Education and Industrial dipping the most.

Gains in Commercial & Retail and Infrastructure were the only positives as all other sectors fell behind. Residential contract awards were the most stable, falling just 11%.

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