Is a Housing Association classed as a public landlord?

Is a Housing Association classed as a public landlord?

  • Yes

    Votes: 3 42.9%
  • No

    Votes: 2 28.6%
  • Both/either depending on circumstances

    Votes: 2 28.6%

  • Total voters
    7
what bit of a simple yes or no are you two struggling with
are they classed as NONE PROFIT making
 
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are they classed as NONE PROFIT making
No

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They are classed as private entities that operate within the public sector.
 
you better report them to the taxman then you could be in for a substantial reward
From 1, it might help


The surplus we make is not paid out to shareholders or spent on higher salaries or locked away in a bank vault. It is used as working capital to reduce the amount we need to borrow to build new homes. Last year we spent £64m on 625 new homes and only received £4.7m in grant. All the rest came from existing loans and cash surpluses, without the need to borrow any more money. That reduces our interest costs so creates a virtuous circle of higher profits. If we didn’t have this cash available we would quickly get into a downward spiral of increased interest costs and ever lower profits that would seriously restrict our ability to build new homes.

Overall in 2013/14 we received £181.4m of cash and spent £192m, so reduced our cash holdings by £10.6m.

So, despite the £39m surplus shown in our accounts, in real cash terms we spent more last year than we received. Housing Association surpluses don’t show this because the money we spend on new homes and some major repairs doesn’t show up on our income and expenditure accounts but on our balance sheets and cash flow statements.



Sounds like a profit to me, but its a different word, surplus.
 
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