Report On How Housing Became Unaffordable
EMBARGOED UNTIL 10 June 2013, 12.01am
MEDIA RELEASE: Report On How Housing Became Unaffordable
The New Zealand Initiative is launching the first in a series of reports on housing affordability, co-authored by former local government minister Hon Dr Michael Bassett and Luke Malpass.
Priced Out – How New Zealand Lost Its Housing Affordability looks at long-term trends in housing regulation and social circumstances as well as the changing roles of local and central governments.
The report reveals how and why New
Zealand is suffering a shortfall of houses. It blames New
Zealand’s housing crisis on anti-development attitudes,
tighter building regulations, and artificial restrictions on
land supply.
Despite a richer and larger population, New
Zealand’s rates of building have fallen away since the
1960s and 1970s. As a result, New Zealand’s new house
building is lagging with a shortfall of at least 10,000 new
houses annually – a shortfall that is continuing to grow.
Key points in the report include:
·
The number of new houses built dropped from a record 34,400
in 1974 to a little over 15,000 last year. Although New
Zealand’s economy improved in the 1990s and early 2000s,
housing completions have seldom reached the rate of new
household formation.
· The number of
newly completed homes in 2011 was only 46% of the number of
homes built 35 years earlier.
· Less
than 1% of New Zealand is built upon even after including
landfill and roads. Fears of ‘using up all our farmland’
are grossly exaggerated.
· Fear of
‘urban sprawl’ has resulted in urban limits and
restrictive and prescriptive zoning, which have conferred a
virtual monopoly market power on landowners near the city
fringes.
· As New Zealand has become
more prosperous, green agendas of more affluent New
Zealanders have trumped traditional egalitarian social
aspirations, such as suburban homeownership.
“Although a slim majority of New Zealanders now think rising house prices are undesirable, the current policy quagmire has created a situation where the interests of those who are lucky enough to own property are often opposed to the interests of non-owners or younger people,” say Bassett and Malpass
Commenting on the report, the Initiative’s Executive Director Dr Oliver Hartwich says, “It is scandalous that ordinary New Zealanders are increasingly priced out of the housing market. We need to restore housing affordability to improve social mobility. And we should ensure that today’s young generation can realistically aspire to own their own homes without being burdened by huge mortgages.”
The report is the first of three that aims
to facilitate more informed public debate on the contentious
issues of housing in New Zealand. The report will be
launched by the Hon Dr Michael Bassett on Tuesday 11 June,
5.30-8.00pm at the Initiative’s Wellington offices.
Key Messages: http://img.scoop.co.nz/media/pdfs/1306/Key_Messages__one_pager.pdf
Full Report: http://img.scoop.co.nz/media/pdfs/1306/PRICED_OUT__100dpi.pdf
ENDS