INFROMATION FROM PROPERTY COUNCIL OF AUSTRALIA
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The detail A new report
by the Property Council of Australia has found the vast majority of
Australians believe there is a lack of affordable housing supply in their
local community, with a failure to plan for our growing population having the
biggest negative impact on affordability. The fresh
report titled A stark
reality: Part one in a thought leadership series on housing choice and
affordability for a growing Australia will be launched at an
event in Parliament House this morning, attended by Housing Minister Julie
Collins and newly appointed CEO of the Property Council Mike Zorbas. The paper
draws together community sentiment and a suite of data to paint the starkest
picture yet of Australia as a global laggard in providing affordable housing
for its people. The report
also flags potential solutions to the crisis. These include giving the
Australian government’s newly-formed Housing Supply and Affordability Council
the power to publicly scorecard and rank the states and territories on their
housing supply efforts, and showing how governments can boost the supply of
retirement living, purpose-built student accommodation and build-to-rent
housing. The sentiment
survey in the report found 81 per cent of Australians believe there is a lack
of housing that is affordable in their area, with housing affordability the
second biggest concern among respondents, ranked only behind the cost of
living. Property
Council of Australia Chief Executive Mike Zorbas said Australians are feeling
the effects of years of inaction. “We have to
change things up. We can’t afford another decade of failure,” Mr Zorbas said.
“Whether it’s
owned, rented or social housing, we need to provide more opportunities to
produce new and more housing options to meet our growing needs. (Just get on with it and stop talking about it - action is required is what I say - for years all Governments have had their chances but they just keep talking about it) “The pandemic
brought the huge value of skilled migration to our economy into sharp focus,
which perhaps explains why people are less concerned about population growth
as a negative driver, and are now more focused on the role planners have to
play in providing the choice and affordability Australians deserve. “Australia is
home to property companies that lead the world in sustainability and
resilience metrics. Now is the time to put that global expertise into action
here at home, by delivering the housing choices for our growing needs, and
lifting Australia off the bottom of the affordability ratings,” he said. (Just all words) The sentiment
survey found 45 per cent of Australians believe the government should arrange
incentives to encourage developers to build more affordable housing stock for
key workers like nurses, police and teachers. It also found 40 per cent of
people want to allow more townhouses and duplexes to be built to boost
housing stock. (Developers are not interested in helping the Government without rewards, so get your own developers pay them well and bloody do it) The survey
also found over half of all renters say they are renting because they have no
other option on the table, with a third believing they won’t be able to
purchase a home in the next five years. (Fact of life, not everyone can buy a home, especially in the Western Suburbs you have to have a good credit rating and a job to start with) “While a
significant portion of people who rent feel trapped, another significant
portion chose to and prefer renting because it suits them,” Mr Zorbas said. (as rents continue to rise you will see that change) “If you are
senior Australian who wants to expand their quality of life in a retirement
village, a student who wants a community conveniently based near their place
of learning or a family who seeks the improved security of tenure that comes
with Build-to-Rent housing you need governments at all levels to make
investment in these options as affordable as possible,” he said. (retirements have got better over the years but its the affordability to be honest) According to
Demographia’s International Housing Affordability 2022 report, Australia was
the sole nation with all of the major city markets ranked as severely unaffordable.
Sydney was the second least affordable market among 92 surveyed, with all 5
Australian capitals measured sitting inside the worst 20 for affordability. (Fact of life unfortunately, near the city is so expensive, yet here in Perth still quite cheap you have to perhaps scale down your expectations) The Property
Council report, which is the first in a series of reports as part of a
broader thought leadership campaign around housing, focuses on three key
pillars of choice,
affordability and
the need to plan for a
growing Australia. (All just blah blah talk with no action) One of these days the people are actually going to stand up and be countered and make you guys accountable as its all on your backs. Personally there should have been housing done in Perth for the homeless no one in Perth should be homeless. We have plenty of land available. MAKE YOUR OWN DECISIONS AND GIVE IT A REAL GO!! SELLING MOSMAN PARK & THE WESTERN SUBURBS!! KEEPING IT REAL IS OUR MOTTO!! |
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