Q+A: Minister Phil Twyford
Q+A: Minister Phil Twyford interviewed by Corin
Dann
to
Housing and Urban Development Minister Phil
Twyford announces purchase of ‘nearly 30ha of prime urban
land in the heart of Auckland’ for thousands of new
homes.
It is located at the Unitec site in Mt Albert.
‘It’s going to be the site of an exciting new urban development project that will see probably between 3000 and 4000 new homes built there.’
I would hope that we’d see between 30 and 40% KiwiBuild affordable homes for young Kiwi families.’
Minister Phil Twyford also told Q+A’s Corin Dann he
also wants to see state housing on the site.
The Minister says the government is
‘committed to exploring a shared-equity programme’.
‘We are looking at shared equity, because, you know, for a lot of people, a mortgage of $500,000 is out of reach.’
The Minister says it will be a year before they can build on the site.
Q +
A
Episode
4
PHIL
TWYFORD
Interviewed by Corin
Dann
CORIN We are going to talk
housing now, KiwiBuild. New news from Phil Twyford this
morning, who joins us in the studio. Good morning to you, Mr
Twyford.
PHIL Good
morning,
Corin.
CORIN Good
to have you here. Tell us, you’ve got an announcement
coming in an hour or so out at Unitec Mt Albert, Auckland.
What have you
got?
PHIL Well,
it’s very exciting. We purchased nearly 30ha of prime
urban land in the heart of Auckland at the Unitec site at Mt
Albert. It’s going to be the site of an exciting new urban
development project that will see probably between 3000 and
4000 new homes built there in what we hope will be a
showcase for the best of modern urban
development.
CORIN How
many KiwiBuild
homes?
PHIL That’s
something to be worked out once we get the development
partners in place. I would hope that we’d see between 30
and 40% KiwiBuild affordable homes for young Kiwi
families.
CORIN So,
we’re talking 1000 or so, something like
that?
PHIL Probably
a bit more than that. I also want to see state housing
there, cos, you know, if we don’t build good affordable
public housing, state housing, for people, who
will?
CORIN We know
that there was an initial look there by the last government
out at Unitec, and there was protests- Well, groups that
were unhappy because of the transport, because of the
congestion. Are you expecting some pushback
there?
PHIL Well,
we still have to do the master planning. We’re at a very
early stage right now, but ensuring good transport links
will be a critical part of this exercise, but the amazing
thing about this site is that it’s going to have superb
transport links. It’s got the Mt Albert rail station at
one end. It’s going to have light rail at the other Pt
Chev end. It’s right next to the
water-
CORIN So
you’ve got transport, but people are still going to drive,
and those roads around that Unitec are already very
congested. You put in 5000, so that’s a lot of people and
a lot of cars going into a very congested
area.
PHIL Well,
with such fantastic rail links, with the bus service line on
Carrington Rd. It’s got cycle lanes on all sides of the
development site. Actually, this could well be the first big
developments we’ve ever seen where you don’t need to own
a car to
live.
CORIN Who’s
going to do it? Who’s going to build it? Have you got the
builders? Have you got the companies, the property
developers? Who’s doing
it?
PHIL So again,
it’s early days, but we are going to be working closely
with Auckland iwi on this. You know, under the Treaty
settlement, members of the Tamaki Collective have the right
to bid for and to have a
role-
CORIN So,
they’re an investor or property developer part of
this?
PHIL Both,
and we are going to be sitting down with iwi in the weeks to
come nutting out exactly the process that we are going to
take and what kind of involvement they will have.
CORIN Pre-fab
houses? What sort of houses are we talking about
here?
PHIL Well,
consistent with our wider KiwiBuild plans, I think offsite
manufacturing, modern pre-fab, has to be one of the biggest
opportunities we have to build more houses, better quality,
at a better price. And I would hope that the houses we’re
going to be building on the Unitec site, a good number of
them, would be modern pre-fab
houses.
CORIN So
let’s just focus in on the KiwiBuild homes that are going
to be there, because this is the ones for first-home buyers,
the ones that people are struggling to get on the property
market. What will the pricing be for a KiwiBuild house in Mt
Albert- the Mt Albert
development?
PHIL So,
you’re talking medium-density, as pretty much all the
KiwiBuild homes in Auckland are going to be medium-density,
apartments, flats and town houses, terraces. 500,000 to
600,000 is the kind of range we’re talking
about.
CORIN So
somebody is going to get a $600,000- what, two-bedroom,
three-bedroom house in Mt
Albert?
PHIL Yes.
Two to three,
yes.
CORIN That’s
really
cheap.
PHIL Sure.
CORIN I
mean, the minute they open the- the minute they get the key,
that will be worth $100,000 more, won’t
it?
PHIL So the
first thing is we’re going to be flooding the market over
time with these houses. We are going to change the market
dynamic, not just with increasing supply through KiwiBuild,
but also the demand side tax changes that we’re making, so
you’re not going to see the kind of year after year high
levels of capital gain that have been a feature over the
last 20
years-
CORIN But
can you get a three-bedroom house of any kind in Mt Albert
for 600,000? The point I’m making is – where’s the
fairness in this? So how do you decide who gets that house?
And presumably they’re going to get a massive capital gain
regardless of what happens, because that’s quite a low
value for that
area.
PHIL So in
the early years, until the market dynamics change
sufficiently, you are going to see the potential for
windfall gains. That’s why we’re very likely to have,
for example, a requirement that you stay in the house for a
certain number of
years-
CORIN Five
years, is
it?
PHIL We
haven’t put a time on it
yet-
CORIN You did
put a time on it in your election
policy.
PHIL We
said that there’d be a significant number of
years-
CORIN You
said five
years.
PHIL Well,
and at the end of that time, you might have to, for
instance, pay back a share of the capital gains, so that’s
basically to avoid the situation of a windfall
gain.
CORIN Hang
on, that wasn’t in the policy. That’s
new.
PHIL Yeah,
what we said was- all we’ve said for the last six years ,
is that you’d be required to stay in the house for a
number of years. If you had to leave- People have to move
for all sorts of reasons. Then you would have to repay some
of the capital
gains.
CORIN I
thought the policy said once you’ve been there for five
years, then you got the capital gain. You had to stay for
five years. That’s what the policy
said.
PHIL Yeah,
that’s what I’m saying. If you had to leave earlier,
then you’d have to pay back some of the capital
gain.
CORIN Yeah,
sure, but are you saying that it might be longer than five
years? Is that what’ you are
signalling?
PHIL We
haven’t put detail on that. We’re still working through
some of the detail on that
issue.
CORIN But
you did put a date- you did put the five years on it. So
you’re now saying that it could be
changed?
PHIL Yeah,
it could be. We’re working through some of the detail on
that to see whether there might be better ways of doing
it.
CORIN Because,
yeah, so the other thing is – are you looking at shared
equity? I mean, would it potentially—Would you potentially
be looking at the government owning some of the house to
help those who can’t raise the deposit or can’t service
a $500,000
mortgage?
PHIL We
are looking at shared equity, because, you know, for a lot
of people, a mortgage of $500,000 is out of reach. We want a
big group of young Kiwi families to have access to the
amazing opportunities that KiwiBuild will offer, and so
shared equity, where, for instance, the government or
another investor retains a share of the equity, and that
means a much smaller mortgage for the homebuyer, but over
time you get the opportunity to buy out that equity stake.
That could open up affordable home ownership to a much
bigger group of
Kiwis.
CORIN How
widespread are you looking at doing
that?
PHIL We’re
doing the work on that now, but it will take
capital-
CORIN Yeah,
I was going to say, you’ve only got $2 billion to play
with. You won’t have enough money to do that with on a
large scale, will
you?
PHIL Yeah, so
we never intended that the $2 billion that kicks in on July
1 as the capital fund for KiwiBuild, it was never intended
to fund shared equity with that, but actually what’s
becoming clear is that there are opportunities, for
instance, to bring private capital in, so we’re exploring
that now.
CORIN Banks, are
you working with
banks?
PHIL And
other investors to see whether or not we can create a fund
that would sustain a shared-equity
programme.
CORIN So
how does that work with the private banks? Do they get some
sort of sweet-heart deal on the number of houses they get to
write loans
for?
PHIL I can’t
talk detail on that now, but it’s—We’re committed to
exploring a shared-equity
programme.
CORIN So
what this all says is that you’ve looked at it—Cos
there’s a lot of criticism from the likes of MBIE, Reserve
Bank, Treasury, I mean, Infometrics. They all, sort of,
suggesting that you’ve been quite heroic with your
forecasts about how many houses you can build and the
affordability. You seem to be saying that you’ve gone away
and had a look and, yes, you have to come up with some new
solutions, particularly around affordability to get people
into these
houses.
PHIL Corin,
we inherited a mess. We’ve had to start from scratch to
build the platform for a massive government-backed building
programme, and we’re going to throw everything including
the kitchen sink at this problem. No stone will be left
unturned, because the crisis is so bad in New Zealand, it
requires ambition. It requires bold and creative approaches,
but I have no doubt in my mind that if we apply ourselves to
this seriously, we will build a supply chain of beautifully
built modern affordable homes for young Kiwi families.
Starting from July 1 when that $2 billion kicks in and then
over that three years, we’ll ramp up to 10,000 a year.
CORIN So when will
the first house be built out at Mt Albert, KiwiBuild
house?
PHIL Well,
the early advice is that probably it will be about a year
before we can build on the site, so Unitec, Polytech, who
own this site up until now, they have to relocate some of
their
operation.
CORIN Is
that frustrating for you? Because, you know, you’re under
massive pressure. Every day in the House, Parliament, you
know, Judith Collins is on your back. She’s saying,
‘Hey, when are these houses going to be built? When are
they going to be built?’ When are you going to turn some
sods?
PHIL Sure,
so you’ll see the first KiwiBuild homes later this year.
It will start off as a trickle, but very soon it will be a
flood of announcements. We’re working with private sector
right now. We’re looking at buying properties, or
underwriting them, off the plan in private sector
developments. We’re also providing vacant government land
to developers so that they can develop them on a
deferred-payment basis and build KiwiBuild homes on that
land.
CORIN I want
to go back to where I started on that equity thing because
it’s still bugging me. So how—Let’s say there’s,
what, 1000, 2000 KiwiBuild homes out at Mt Albert, for
instance, how do you decide who gets them, right? So is
there a ballot? Who’s the first homebuyer who gets in?
Because they win the lottery if they get that place. They
got great transport, a house that’s under the market
value.
Boom!
PHIL So,
there’s no doubt in the early years there’s going to be
far more demand for these houses than we can supply in the
early months and years, so we’ve always said that we will
ballot these houses. So first homebuyers, as long as
they’re citizens or permanent residents, they’re first
homebuyers or second-chancers who are in the same position,
they will put their name into a ballot for a particular
group of houses in a particular
development.
CORIN And
you’ll screen them, you know, test them and all these
sorts of things to make sure they are who they say they are
and that sort of
thing?
PHIL Yeah, I
think so, but there’s no need for a big bureaucracy to
support this. It’s pretty simple. But after a while,
Corin, there won’t need to be a ballot, because there’ll
be so many houses coming on stream, there won’t be the
mismatch of supply and demand that we’ve inherited after
nine years
adrift.
CORIN So
how quickly do you think you can get rid of the ballot
scheme?
PHIL We’ll
have to wait and
see.
CORIN Here’s
the thing. I don’t think anyone—People are grateful of
the ambition and the drive and that you’re trying to do
all this, but have you just been too ambitious and too
heroic? I mean, to put it, well, rather crudely.
Infometrics, the economic outfit, they just said you’re
pulling numbers out of your arse. That’s what they said.
That was the name of their report. KiwiBuild – you’re
pulling numbers out of your
arse.
PHIL I’ll
tell you what, that’s a lot better than sitting on your
arse for nine years, which is what the former government did
on
housing.
CORIN Touche.
The fundamental issue they have, though, is, and it’s one
that the Reserve Bank and Treasury has touched on as well,
is that you’re going to crowd out the private sector and
that net, overall, by the time you’ve built your KiwiBuild
houses, we’re not going to have many more houses than we
would have had
anyway.
PHIL Well,
there’s two things to say about that. First is that we
have a situation of market failure right now. They former
government thought somehow the market would magically fix
itself. Our philosophy is that when the market fails, it’s
time for the government to roll up its sleeves and get in
there and fix the problem. That’s the whole philosophy of
KiwiBuild. The second thing is that some of the earlier
advice from Treasury and MBIE in the first couple of weeks
in the government didn’t take into account that we’re
going to remove some of the obstacles that are currently
stopping industry from scaling up. Now, pre-fab or offsite
manufacturing, that’s one of the ways we can get around
the workforce shortage that we have. So if we can contract
large volumes of KiwiBuild homes. Let’s say thousands of
homes over multiple years, to a firm that has a factory that
can churn out high-quality homes at a better cost, we get
around some of those workforce
issues.
CORIN Can
you guarantee that they’ll be quality? Cos this is the
concern, that you’re under this pressure. You’ve got
huge pressure to deliver this. Are you going to make sure
that we’re not going to have slums, that we’re not going
to have poor-quality houses. For example, will these houses
be energy-efficient? Will they meet your carbon-zero
act?
PHIL Well, one
of the big advantages of a mass procurement programme like
KiwiBuild is that you can actually set standards. I mean,
we’ll be making sure that those homes are top quality,
beautifully designed and built, and warm and dry. When you
build homes in a factory using the latest digital
high-precision automation, actually, the quality is
superior.
CORIN But
you’re still 9000 builders short, though. That’s what
the Reserve Bank says, that you’re 9000 builders short to
do that.
PHIL Right, so
with offsite manufacturing, you need fewer skilled workers,
cos you’re using automation to build these houses in
factories, but we’re also putting in place a workforce
development strategy right across government. We’re going
to ramp up trade training and apprenticeships right across
the entire construction industry. We’re also going to
aggressively recruit the skills we need from overseas,
because we’ve inherited a basket case. It’s going to
take that kind of bold action to kick start the
industry.
CORIN Before
we go, on the issue of affordability and loans, so will you
make any changes to the ‘Welcome Home’ loans, the
KiwiSaver kick-start in order to help people get
in?
PHIL In a
perfect world, you’d want to do that, but at the moment we
have this terrible imbalance between supply and demand –
not enough supply, too much demand. If we throw more
subsidies at homebuyers, that will only have one
consequence. It will drive prices up even higher, and we
don’t want
that.
CORIN Because
one of the things that Infometrics talked about was that
they, and I think it might have been MBIE actually, that,
you know, you’re looking at someone needing—a couple
needing $114,000 in Auckland in order to service a mortgage
for a $600,000 home. I mean, that’s going to rule out a
lot of people who you’re targeting if they have to have
that level of
income.
PHIL I’m
not sure about those numbers, you know. Core Logic recently
said that more than half of first homebuyers in Auckland
were buying homes more expensive than 750,000. There’s a
huge
number--
CORIN But
how much are they earning, though? I mean, that’s the
thing, if they can afford it, then they don’t need help,
do they?
PHIL No,
those people don’t. There’s people that are just next to
them who are kind of looking for the helping hand that
KiwiBuild can
give.
CORIN So what
will the salary limit be? Will there be a salary
limit?
PHIL We’re
not going to means test KiwiBuild. We don’t want to put in
place a big heavy bureaucracy to run this. We’re going to
build so many houses, Corin, that there’ll be homes for
first homebuyers who desperately want a home of their own.
Former governments in New Zealand did this for decades, and
we can do it
again.
CORIN But
you’re telling me, though, that someone whose parents
might give them 100 grand for a deposit, who’s earning—a
couple, a young professional couple earning $150,000 could
get in the ballot. If they’re lucky, they get a house out
at Mt Albert for $600,000 that’s probably going to be
worth $800,000 a year later. That’s not fair, is
it?
PHIL So means
testing, we just don’t think that’s the way to go with
KiwiBuild. Everybody wants home ownership. We’re going to
provide KiwiBuild houses for people who can afford them, but
we’re also reforming the rental market for the half of
Kiwis who rent. We’ve stopped National’s sell-off of
state housing, and we’re building thousands of extra state
houses. Our housing policy is a big, bold reform programme,
and there’s something in it for
everyone.
CORIN Phil
Twyford, thank you very much for joining us, and good luck
with your announcement later today.
PHIL Thank
you.
CORIN Thank
you.
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