Bedrooms are being re-classified as storage space or whatever
The problem with that is when it comes time to selling, they will either get hit for a large back-tax when they try and sell their 3 bedroom house, OR, they won't be able to sell it as a 3 bedroom house, thus property prices will drop / be affected as a result of a council decision.
It's not plain sailing, and we have a huge national debt, but Cameron and co like to scare people into thinking the picture is a lot bleaker than it actually is.
You may want to do some fact checking on that one... because the UK is broke and Cameron isn't painting anything worse. You have to first be able to meet your interest obligations, then pay-off the principle sum as well, then meet all your bills (all Government schemes and commitments).
The UK can't currently do the above, and if they were a business they would be put into receivership.
The US had this issue long ago... and again, if they were a business they would have gone into receivership a decade or more ago. As a result the Government has a 0% interest rate, lowered credit rating and still their debt is climbing.
Lucky that Governments are exempt from such things... ha? But as a result the populous suffers from such stupidity made at Government level. At some point, hard decisions must be made for the overall benefit of the country to get out of debt and be able to meet its actual obligations and commitments it promises. If it can't meet them, it needs to rethink them / scrap them entirely.
This is one reason many Australians don't understand why our country shifted towards a mixture of the US / UK health systems, because neither were good by themselves, but when you use both together you get a much better system. We had a completely free system with optional paid private healthcare, though now we have a more forced paid healthcare system for anyone who earns over x amount, otherwise you pay increasingly more for it over x age as well, so you can't wrought the system as you age and need more healthcare needs. With private cover comes disability and trauma pay-outs and such, thus less burden on the Government and populous overall. Yet for those under the income threshold they can have a free system where for life-threatening illness everyone is treated equal, but for everything else, they may have to wait weeks or months for non-life threatening surgeries versus private health cover will get you ahead of the rest because you're contributing towards lowering the Governments burden for medical costs.
The US relies nearly solely on health insurance, thus the Government burden is little... though they have a lot of medical issues as a result with low income persons. The UK puts too much into their NHS and thus the issues experienced are a direct result of that, especially when financial times aren't all that good, being at present. The UK have a lot of hard decisions yet to be made IMHO...
We here in Australia are facing our own issues due to Labor borrowing excessive amounts and putting our national debt around $250bn at present. That doesn't sound like much compared to other countries, but it is significant for this country with a land mass just shy of the US, yet we have less than 25 million populous compared to the US at around 330 million. People get excited when our Government gets us into surplus for a year (we saved some money beyond paying the bills), but they forget that we need about 20 years of surplus, which means 20 years of suffering some hard decisions and going without in order to get national debt under control.
Countries globally are borrowing money that they simply can't afford to pay back, and then wonder why systems are collapsing within countries. Why bedroom taxes are becoming a requirement and other such issues. The UK has a different issue, with 65 million people in an area the size of the state I live in now, Victoria, Australia, a single state, and our third smallest in the country. That is a scary thought for room to move, let alone if we have our own countries populous in the size of just one small state of our country.
There are huge issues going on... and people with their hand out is not going to fix any of them in these times. That may be harsh, but it doesn't make it any less true.