Incentivise use of new construction technology
Reform UK · what the evidence says
An independent, source-checked look at Reform UK’s policy “Incentivise use of new construction technology” — what it would actually do across the things that affect your life. Every claim below quotes the source behind it. How this works.
Affordable housing — Mixed picture
minor · low confidence
Faster, cheaper construction methods could help build more homes and reduce costs over time, but the policy lacks specifics on affordable or social tenure, and high upfront investment costs are a known barrier. Whether faster building translates into homes ordinary people can afford depends on factors this policy does not address.
The evidence
- The policy commits to incentivising modular construction, digital technology, and efficiency improvements to speed up building. — reformparty.uk (manifesto) — “Reform UK will incentivise innovation in construction to speed up building through modular construction, digital technology, and building sites that improve efficiency and cut waste.”
- Modular construction could reduce construction times by up to 50% in some cases. — theoffsiteguide.com (media) — “reducing overall construction times by up to 50% in some cases”
- Modular construction may reduce costs by up to 20% due to economies of scale and reduced waste. — keyman.uk.com (media) — “modular construction can reduce costs by up to 20% due to economies of scale and reduced waste”
- The policy does not explicitly address tactics to tackle the skills shortage that a shift to these methods would create. — housingexecutive.co.uk (media) — “Reform UK's policy proposal has been noted for not explicitly addressing tactics to tackle this specific skills shortage”
- A shift to offsite construction demands a workforce with specific skills that can present a new skills gap. — theoffsiteguide.com (media) — “a shift to offsite construction demands a workforce with specific skills in advanced technologies, automation, and manufacturing techniques, which can also present a new skills gap”
Biggest unknown: Whether incentivising construction technology leads to genuinely affordable homes — rather than just more market-rate homes — depends entirely on unspecified delivery mechanisms and tenure requirements not included in this policy.
Our reading: The policy promises to incentivise modern construction methods that independent evidence suggests can meaningfully speed up build times and reduce per-unit costs. If those efficiency gains translated fully into more homes on the market — especially affordable ones — this would improve O1. However, three problems limit the verdict to 'mixed' at minor magnitude. First, the policy contains no tenure or affordability conditions: faster, cheaper building could simply produce more market-rate homes that remain unaffordable for lower-income households. Second, the high upfront capital cost of establishing modular factories is a known structural barrier — especially in the affordable housing sector — and the policy provides no mechanism to overcome it. Third, the skills shift required is unaddressed by the policy, risking delivery shortfalls. On the positive side, genuine supply acceleration (even market-rate) exerts some downward pressure on rents and prices over the long run. On balance, the upsides are real but conditional on delivery details this policy does not supply, and the absence of explicit social/affordable tenure requirements means the benefit to lower-income households is speculative. Confidence is low because the evidence base leans on commercial and advocacy sources, and the crux — whether incentives translate into affordable homes — is entirely unresolved by the policy text.
Prosperity & living standards — Little effect
minor · low confidence
The policy expresses an intention to incentivise construction technology but names no committed budget, tax instrument, or statutory mechanism, so there is no evidenced pathway to the productivity gains the underlying technologies can deliver. Without a concrete lever, the policy is unlikely to move living standards at population scale.
The evidence
- The policy commits to incentivising innovation via modular construction, digital technology, and efficiency improvements, but specifies no concrete instrument, budget, or target. — reformparty.uk (manifesto) — “Reform UK will incentivise innovation in construction to speed up building through modular construction, digital technology, and building sites that improve efficiency and cut waste.”
- Construction productivity in the UK currently remains below the UK average, indicating genuine room for improvement. — constructionmanagement.co.uk (media) — “Overall, construction productivity remains below the UK average”
- Modular construction could reduce construction costs by up to 20% through economies of scale and reduced waste. — keyman.uk.com (media) — “The Construction Industry Training Board (CITB) estimates modular construction can reduce costs by up to 20% due to economies of scale and reduced waste”
- Digital transformation in construction could achieve productivity gains of 14–15%. — payapps.com (media) — “Research indicates that digital transformation can achieve productivity gains of 14-15%”
- The policy has been noted for not explicitly addressing the skills shortage that a shift to MMC would create. — housingexecutive.co.uk (media) — “Reform UK's policy proposal has been noted for not explicitly addressing tactics to tackle this specific skills shortage”
- A shift to offsite construction requires specialist skills that are currently in short supply. — theoffsiteguide.com (media) — “A shortage of these specialised skills is identified as a challenge”
Biggest unknown: What specific incentive instrument (tax relief, procurement mandate, capital grant) would be introduced, and at what scale — this determines whether the productivity benefits of MMC and digital tools are actually unlocked.
Our reading: The underlying technologies the policy points to — modular construction and digital tools — have credible evidence of productivity and cost benefits (14–20% range across multiple estimates). Construction productivity is genuinely below the UK average, so the sector is a plausible target for improvement. However, the policy text contains only an aspiration to 'incentivise' with no committed instrument: no tax relief scheme, no public procurement mandate, no capital fund, no quantified target. Under the soft-verb rule this defaults to negligible absent evidence a specific mechanism fires at scale. The two main structural barriers — high upfront capital costs and a specialist skills gap — are both evidenced and neither is addressed by the policy text. Without tackling these, even a well-intentioned incentive signal is unlikely to move sector-wide productivity materially. The counterfactual (no policy) sees the same market forces that have produced below-average construction productivity continuing; nothing in the stated policy demonstrably changes that dynamic at population scale. The long-term potential is real if a concrete instrument were specified, which is why magnitude is set to minor rather than n/a — the direction is negligible because the mechanism as stated cannot be assessed as delivering at scale, not because the technology is ineffective.