Main content

Whose Right to Buy Is It Anyway?

As right to buy is extended to housing association tenants, Simon Cox investigates if the scheme is open to fraud and abuse and asks if enough is being done to tackle the problem.

Around 2.5m council tenants across the UK have bought their homes since Right to Buy started in 1980. The scheme is now being extended to more than a million housing association tenants in England with the first homes expected to be sold in pilot areas next month.
The popularity of right to buy has risen sharply since greater discounts were introduced four years ago, but so too have cases of fraud as people seek to exploit discounts of up to nearly 拢104,000.

Simon Cox goes on the trail of the fraudsters and the companies seeking to make big bucks out of right to buy. He discovers people trying to buy homes they're not entitled to and criminals attempting to launder drugs money.

He investigates companies who offer tenants help to buy their home in order to get their hands on valuable properties.

He also hears concerns from experts that many housing associations do not have the resources and skills to prevent fraud which could potentially result in the loss of millions of pounds worth of much needed homes

Reporter: Simon Cox
Producer: Paul Grant.

Available now

38 minutes

Last on

Sun 26 Jun 2016 17:00

READ THE PROGRAMME TRANSCRIPT

As right to buy is extended to housing association tenants, Simon Cox investigates if the scheme is open to fraud and abuse and asks if enough is being done to tackle the problem.

Broadcasts

  • Tue 21 Jun 2016 20:00
  • Sun 26 Jun 2016 17:00

Download this programme

Subscribe to this programme or download individual episodes.

Podcast