Lisa Owen interviews ACT leader David Seymour
Lisa Owen interviews ACT leader David Seymour
Seymour says Auckland real estate
figures focusing on Chinese buyers released by Labour are
not surprising and “plausible based on the anecdotes that
you hear”
Says Labour is “shaking
the race tree for votes because they can’t find them
anywhere else” and seems to be trying to find a wedge
issue like National did in
2004.
“They’re not really interested
in foreign ownership; they’re interested in targeting
Chinese, and that is racist”
Says
“we have a problem with housing affordability in Auckland,
no question” but blames Auckland Council and says the
solution is to build more houses
Lisa
Owen: Labour has released leaked real estate data showing
that almost 40% of homes sold in Auckland between February
and April this year were to people with Chinese surnames.
The Nation can reveal that of suburbs of more than a hundred
house sales, the three most popular amongst those with
Chinese surnames were Albany, Epsom and Milford. And ACT
leader David Seymour is the MP for Epsom. His party eagerly
courted the Chinese New Zealand vote last year, and he’s
with me now. What do you make of those numbers, Mr
Seymour?
David Seymour: Oh, I don’t think
they’re hugely surprising, actually. Anecdotally, all the
time you hear about people going to auctions which have a
large number of people who are appear to be Chinese, and
also there’s a lot of tension around housing. There’s a
whole generation who are concerned that house prices which
were maybe three years’ income in the ‘80s and ‘90s,
now houses cost eight or nine times the average household
income, so none—
So do
you—?
So none of that’s
surprising.
So do you think that data is
actually a real representation of how many foreign buyers
are purchasing in the Auckland market?
Well,
I think it’s plausible based on the anecdotes that you
hear.
Okay, well, is presenting it in that way
– is it simple facts that are being laid out, or is it
racism?
I think the real statistic that
matters here is that Labour are peeling off votes to New
Zealand First and they see an opportunity, much as National
did in 2004, to find a big divisive wedge issue that might
get them some votes. They’re shaking the race tree for
votes because they can’t find them anywhere else. And if
you doubt that, you just have to ask yourself of the
European surnames in that list, how many did they test are
New Zealanders or British or other Europeans? They’re not
really interested in foreign ownership; they’re interested
in targeting Chinese, and that is racist.
They
did test all the names for probabilities, but obviously
they’re singling out a certain sector.
So
O’Brien? You know, were there any O’Briens there? Were
they New Zealanders?
So do you think—?
They’re further down on the list, and you can see the
names. There’s British names and other names further down
on the list – Smith, for example. But you regard it as
racism, you’ve just said?
Yeah, I do,
because, look, we have a problem with housing affordability
in Auckland, no question. If you want to get to the bottom
of that problem, here’s what Phil Twyford could have said
and what I think what he actually believe is that in the
1990s Auckland consented 4000, 5000 houses a year – 5000
in the 1990s. In the last 10 years, we consented an average
of 4000 houses per year. Now, over that time, the price of
housing’s increased almost six times over, the
population’s gone up 30%, and yet every year for the last
decade, we’ve consented a thousand fewer houses than we
did in the 1990s.
So are you
saying—?
That’s the
problem.
Are you saying supply’s a problem
and we shouldn’t worry about who’s buying the
houses?
I think if we sort the supply
problem, we won’t have to worry, and that’s the dilemma.
Either we can get into what really is quite embarrassing to
watch the interview that just took place, not on your part,
but when you have to ask questions about whether or not
there are too many Chinese surnames, that is not a country
that’s looking to the future. That is a country that is
busy with itself and looking to the past. The real issue is
that there’s simply not enough supply of housing, and I
lay that squarely at the door of the Auckland Council and
its planning ethos that says, ‘You must all live in an
apartment over a train station. The city cannot expand,’
and there is ample evidence that is the
cause.
Well, in essence, what Labour is
saying, isn’t it, is that Kiwi homes should be for Kiwi
citizens and taxpayers. What’s wrong with that
sentiment?
Well, the fact is that they can
still live in them, and the other fact is that, okay, that
sentiment—
But not own
them?
That rhetoric is fine, but then the
onus goes back on to Phil Twyford to say, ‘What are you
going to do? Are we going to have a rule like in Sydney,
where foreign buyers can buy new homes but not old ones?’
Well, there’s two problems with that. First of all, it’s
very difficult to identify them legally, and the Labour
members on select committee just last week were pointing out
these problems as we examined the Government’s new
initiative to register foreign home buyers. But second of
all, Sydney has a housing market and affordability problem
that makes Auckland look like a picnic. It hasn’t worked
in Vancouver either.
So are you happy for the
Kiwi masses to be tenants in their own
country?
No, I’m not, but I’m not happy
with having a race-based debate that actually will not
confront the real problem. That is fiddling while Rome
burns. What we need to do is make our housing market
function and produce the houses that all New Zealanders
require.
We’re running out of time, but I do
want to take a look at one other aspect of this data, which
is Epsom is one of the suburbs which is a top choice for
Chinese buyers, according to Labour. And if we look at a
graphic here, they are paying 140,000 more on average than
the next group, so Chinese Asian buyers, well, with those
names, are spending 140 grand more. So they’re not only
buying up significant numbers, arguably, they’re pushing
the price up too, so how can that be good for
anyone?
Well, what I say to people in Epsom
and I hear a lot about the problems with people crowding
auctions and pushing what you might regard as Kiwi buyers
out of the market is that, yes, that is an issue you can
focus on or we can focus on the broader problem – is our
housing market actively supplying the housing that
Aucklanders need? If you want to focus on the first problem,
that’s fine, but we’re going to get far better results
in the long term by getting our own policy settings in
order.
All right, thank you very much for
joining me this morning.
Thank
you.
ACT Epsom MP David
Seymour.
Transcript provided by Able. www.able.co.nz
ENDS