
WILL JONES
Nearly half of all social housing in London, 48%, is occupied by foreign-born heads of household, costing Britain around £3.6 billion a year in discounted rent, analysis suggests. The Telegraph has the story.
Nearly half of all social housing in the capital, 48%, is occupied by foreign-born heads of household, data from the 2021 census shows. This is well over the national average of 19%.
These households benefit from cheap rents which, when compared to private rent in London, average out at a discount of around £11,600 per year per household.
Responding to the figures, Robert Jenrick, the Shadow Justice Secretary, said: “This research shows how the huge costs of mass, low-skilled migration are often hidden from the public. When you lift up the bonnet, it’s clear that the level and composition of immigration have been hugely economically harmful for decades.”
The figures also show some 35% of working age foreign-born heads of households in London’s social housing are either unemployed or economically inactive, despite living in one of the UK’s most prosperous regions.
The most recent ONS figures show that output per hour worked in the capital is approximately 26% higher than the UK average.
The figures cast further doubt on the UK’s migration policies.
Last year, the Office for Budget Responsibility found that low-paid migrant workers were costing taxpayers more than £150,000 each by the time they hit state pension age.

Worth reading in full.
The Telegraph: continue reading
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London’s £3.6 Billion House of Cards: When Ideology Rents Reality at a Discount
CP
London, the great humming dynamo of Britain. A city whose skyline scratches the stratosphere but whose policy logic appears buried somewhere deep beneath the Thames mud.
One might think that in a capital whose productivity per hour eclipses the rest of the UK by 26%, there would be, at the very least, a rational allocation of resources. But no: welcome to Clownworld Housing Policy, where the taxpayer is bilked out of £3.6 billion a year to subsidise social housing for foreign-born residents, all in the name of a “progressive” dream that is proving economically pyrrhic.
The figures are, frankly, staggering. According to census data, nearly half (48%) of all social housing in London is occupied by foreign-born heads of households. The national average? A comparatively quaint 19%. That’s not a statistical quirk; it’s a systemic policy failure wrapped in ideological paralysis.
Social housing rents are vastly discounted, with households enjoying an average break of £11,600 per year compared to the private sector. Multiply that by London’s housing stock and what do you get? A cool £7.7 billion in annual taxpayer-subsidised rent discounts. If foreign-born households are receiving a proportionate slice of this pie, which they are, based on occupancy, that’s £3.6 billion per year drained from public coffers in just one city. One. City.
And this, mind you, in the economic furnace of the nation.
Robert Jenrick rightly popped the bonnet on this decrepit engine of policy saying:
“The huge costs of mass, low-skilled migration are often hidden from the public.”
Hidden, indeed. Beneath layers of institutional self-delusion, cowardice, and the sort of bureaucratic inertia that makes a SpaceX launch look like a game of hopscotch.
And just when you thought the circus couldn’t get more surreal, you discover that 35% of working-age foreign-born heads of social housing households in London are unemployed or economically inactive. In the land of opportunity, they are on standby mode. This isn’t just economically inefficient, it is a grotesque mockery of meritocracy.
London is not some infinite spreadsheet of state generosity. It is a city straining under debt, services stretched thinner than an NHS budget, and housing scarcity so acute it might be more honest to call it state-sanctioned rationing. Yet the government continues to reward economic inactivity and dependency at an industrial scale, subsidised by working citizens who will likely never see a social housing unit themselves, let alone get a discount for their trouble.
And if one is tempted to chalk this up to immigration in general, the numbers demand more nuance. According to the English Housing Survey, 48% of Black Caribbean, 40% of Black African, and 40% of Bangladeshi households in England live in social housing—compared to just 16% of White British, and a mere 5% of Chinese and Indian households. This isn’t just a demographic trend—it’s a glaring indictment of a system with no structure of incentives, no calibration of contribution, and no merit-based filter in sight.
We’re not offering a hand up; we’re institutionalising dependency. The social housing system isn’t a safety net anymore—it’s a hammock. And to be clear, the fault doesn’t lie with the families taking what’s offered. It lies with a system so warped it rewards inertia and punishes effort.
And what is Keir Starmer’s answer? More houses. More public spending. More of the same. The taxpayer picks up the tab while the state digs the hole deeper.
A functional civilisation cannot run on vibes and virtue alone. There must be a line where economic logic reasserts itself, where benefit is matched by contribution, and where housing policy does not reward idleness over effort.
London should be a beacon of ingenuity, not a petri dish for failed social engineering experiments. The people footing the bill, builders, teachers, nurses, engineers, business owners who risk everything to start a business, are being treated as afterthoughts in their own country, priced out of homes by a policy designed to assuage the conscience of the political class rather than serve the needs of the nation.
Enough. Britain cannot afford to continue renting out its future at a discount.
This article (London’s £3.6 Billion House of Cards: When Ideology Rents Reality at a Discount) was created and published by Conservative Post and is republished here under “Fair Use” with attribution to the author CP
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