Treasury Select Committee

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    Estate agents heavily criticised by MPs within parliamentary report on AML

    Report form Treasury Select Committee says agents are weakest link in fighting AML after hearing from NAEA Propertymark and National Crime Agency.

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  • Latest property newsaml committee pair Anti-Money Laundering checks image
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    Agents struggle to spot fake documents during Anti-Money Laundering checks

    
During the grilling by MPs, the two National Crime Agency heads suggested that the anti money laundering hurdles that estate agents have to clear are relatively ineffective.

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    Tory’s flagship housing policy will not get Britain building again, say MPs

    The government’s recently-launched flagship housing policy to get ‘Britain building’ has been heavily criticised by senior MPs today, including members of May’s own party, and also that the Stamp Duty changes for first time buyers will “distort” the property market. The Treasury Select Committee believes both the abolition of Stamp Duty for properties bought by first-time buyers worth up to £300,000, and the easing of the local council borrowing cap to build homes, do not go far enough and will  not achieve the 300,00-a-year new homes a year the government thinks it will. The Committee also says the Stamp Duty will create a ‘cliff edge’ at the £500,000 price point because the new rules enable the duty to be avoided by first time buyers on properties up to that value, although only on the first £300,000. “A house worth £500,000 will attract £5,000 less in SDLT than a house worth £500,001,” the Committee report says. Housing cliff edge “When the previous Government redesigned [Stamp Duty] to remove ‘cliff edges’ faced at certain property values, the then Chancellor said that he had reformed a ‘badly designed system that has distorted our housing market for decades’. “It is regrettable that the abolition…

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