Posts Tagged ‘housing affordability’

Fox’s method of solving hen’s housing affordability

Tuesday, August 19th, 2008

Recently, we saw this article in the news media: First home buyer affordability still at 24-year low

“Affordability will only improve if all governments work together to remove the onerous tax burden and regulatory imposts on new residential construction.”

This quote was said by Housing Industry of Australia (HIA) chief economist Harley Dale. Is that a conflict of interest? This is the same problem that we mentioned before in News media contradiction regarding the Australian rental crisis?:

Rather, we believe that due to the way the human brain is wired, conflict of interests can often result in biased information, especially when the issue concerns money and wealth.

Asking the HIA for a solution to the housing affordability problem is the same as, in the words of one of our readers, asking “yet another fox to guard the hen house.” Basically, the HIA wants the housing affordability problem to be ‘solved’ by:

  1. Reduce government taxation burden on homebuilders so that there is a greater incentive to build homes.
  2. Release more land for housing construction.

What is the underlying assumption of this ‘solution?’ Well, this ‘solution’ assumes that there is a housing ‘shortage.’ But what if the assumption is wrong? In that case, this is what we said in Australian housing shortage myth,

When it comes to solving Australia’s housing problem, there is an entrenched superstition that makes many believe that there is a housing ‘shortage’ in Australia. This superstition has resulted in many proposed solutions to the housing affordability crisis that are completely useless, wasteful and counter-productive.

As we said, in that article,

In reality, the housing ‘shortage’ superstition is the result of an illusion. The illusion arises from the fact that there is a mismatch of housing demand and supply. In some parts of Sydney, there is an over-demand for housing, which gives rise to the housing ‘shortage’ illusion. In other parts of Sydney, there is an over-supply of housing (some of them brand new) that are unwanted.

Let’s imagine the government decides to remove all taxation burdens on builders and release all land for house building tomorrow. This will be a builders’ paradise. But will that be a home buyer’s paradise? If the government really do that, do you think the builders will begin a house building spree and solve the housing shortage and affordability problem? Well, consider one of our reader’s protests in Australian housing shortage myth:

Mis-investment, who wants to live on Paramatta Rd, especially where this building is, it’s on Parramatta Rd and miles from the city. Would you live there?

All the empty dwellings on the outskirts of the city are just mis-investment, they are overprice houses in areas where people don’t actually want to live or they can’t afford them anyway.

The context of this comment lies in the fact that there are a lot of brand-new apartments and houses in the outer suburbs of Sydney that remain unsold. They remained unsold because these brand new homes are undesirable for various reasons (e.g. too far from city, no transport infrastructure, etc.). Obviously, these builders are losing money because of insufficient demand for these homes. That could be a contributing reason for current recession in the home building industry.

Why are these homes undesirable in the first place? There are many reasons: lack of infrastructure development (especially transport), rising fuel costs that makes car ownership expensive, lack of amenities, far away from employment centres, etc. Worse still, look at the wasteful use of land in Sydney- lack of high-rise residential apartments even in places near the CBD. In Singapore, they have a population that is as big as Sydney squeezed in a land area several times smaller. It should be clear by now who had been sleeping behind the wheel to allow the situation to become what it is today.

Next, what are the many short-term solutions proposed by governments to tackle the home affordability crisis from the demand side? All the ‘solutions’ proposed so far involves boosting the ability of buyers to pay for the already exorbitant and overvalued prices of homes. Examples of such solutions include first homeowner’s grant, tax-reduced savings account and so on. These ‘solutions’ can be compared to solving hangover problems by supplying more alcohol for drinkers to drink their way out of pain.

So far, no government has the guts to propose a politically unpalatable way of alleviating this problem by encouraging further deflation of house price through a change in the tax regime. In fact, there are plenty of scope for further property price deflation. As Associate Professor Steve Keen said in Brace yourselves for recession, says Steve Keen,

I think something of the orders of 40 per cent of prices are simply financed by people’s expectations that the prices will keep on rising.

Well when this expectation goes, ultimately goodbye 40 per cent of the current price of houses.

The question is, which of these two would one want to be the trigger for property price deflation?

  • Changes in the tax regime

OR

  • Rising unemployment, rising mortgage rates, further unravelling of the credit crisis, economic slowdown

In Australia, we have a tax regime of fully taxing savings and half taxing speculation- interest income are fully taxed whereas there is capital tax exemption/concession for property ‘investment,’ negative gearing, etc. Such tax regime encourages people to speculate, fall deeper into debt and discourage savings, which is the last thing the Australian economy needs right now. If the government is unwilling even to alleviate the housing affordability crisis in the short term by changing the tax regimes, then Australia have to rely on an inevitable economic crisis to do that, which is more painful and a lose-lose outcome for everybody.

Australian housing shortage myth

Tuesday, May 27th, 2008

When it comes to solving Australia’s housing problem, there is an entrenched superstition that makes many believe that there is a housing ‘shortage’ in Australia. This superstition has resulted in many proposed solutions to the housing affordability crisis that are completely useless, wasteful and counter-productive. For many vested interests, it may as well be that such a superstition be propagated. But for the sake of our nation, it is in everyone’s interest that this superstition be demolished.

Back in November 2007, we said before in Myths on the Australian housing/rental crisis & its implications, the numbers from the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) shows that from 2001 to 2006,

The increase in the number of dwellings far exceeded the population growth and household formation. Furthermore, the increase in unoccupied dwellings is almost triple the increase in population growth.

Therefore, there cannot be a real shortage in housing. As this article in the Sydney Morning Herald (SMH), Empty dwellings in a city desperate for places to live reported yesterday,

The number of unoccupied residential dwellings in Sydney counted by census workers in 2006 was 122,211, with the highest number found in the inner city. That does not include the thousands of empty warehouses, pubs, churches and shops.

Below is the map of the unoccupied dwellings based on the 2006 census data:

Number of vacant dwellings (per local government area)

We can expect the numbers to be increasing from 2006, due to mortgage defaulters. If there is no housing shortage, then any solution to the housing affordability problem that involves building more houses (i.e. increasing the supply of housing) is a complete waste of resources. As that article quoted Mr James,

“You get the property development industry bleating about how they need to produce 1000 dwellings a week to meet housing demand,” he said. “I say to them, “Well, guys, there’s 120,000 houses out there you are not doing anything with.”

So, what is there such a superstition in the first place? In reality, the housing ‘shortage’ superstition is the result of an illusion. The illusion arises from the fact that there is a mismatch of housing demand and supply. In some parts of Sydney, there is an over-demand for housing, which gives rise to the housing ‘shortage’ illusion. In other parts of Sydney, there is an over-supply of housing (some of them brand new) that are unwanted.

Of course, we can expect vested interest to be in denial of this problem. As this article in the SMH, Empty homes now for all to see, reported today, NSW president of the Property Council, Ken Morrison said,

“Vacant properties tend to be very much third-tier-quality building held by private owners who have some sort of other objective for the property than income yield,” Mr Morrison said. “You just don’t get perfectly tenantable apartments which are vacant.”

Really? Fortunately, there is a web site, Bubblepedia, which “has a maps section and an image gallery so readers can send in pictures of the buildings they believe are going to waste.” An example of a block of brand new overpriced apartments (in Parramatta, Sydney) that had been mostly vacant for 18 months:

Apartments. Overpriced not many sold. Been available 18 months

 

The link to this photo at Bubblepedia web site can be found here.

The statistics from the ABS tells us that there is an overall glut of empty dwellings in Australia. Anecdotal evidence from the Bubblepedia shows us the real-life photos of vacant housing. Now that this web site has gained publicity in the mainstream media (it crashed today due to overwhelming traffic), we will get to see more pictures of empty dwellings that had gone to waste.

So, what is the implication of the housing ‘shortage’ being a myth? First, many of the so-called proposed ‘solutions’ to the housing affordability problem have to be abolished. As we said before in Myths on the Australian housing/rental crisis & its implications,

As a result, many of the conventional solutions to the housing/rental crisis will not work. Therefore, the only sustainable solution is to introduce/change policies that will encourage a sustained decline in property prices (e.g. remove Capital Gains Tax exemption, close negative gearing loophole)- we recognize that such solutions are politically costly (nobody wants to see the value of their property fall). If the government will not make such a move, then sustained interest/mortgage rates rise will have to step in to do the job.

In addition, land has to be more efficiently used. For example, in Sydney, if you drive along Parramatta Road towards city, you will find rows of old double-storey shop houses. These should be demolished to make way for high-rise buildings.

Furthermore, Sydney is under-developed and under-maintained in terms of infrastructure. For example, there are many brand new housing estates in outer suburbs of Sydney that remained unattractive for buyers because they are located in relatively remote locations that are under-serviced by infrastructures such as transport.

So, why does Australia have a housing affordability problem? Three words to sum it: mismanagement, speculation (see The Bubble Economy) and hoarding.