• Advertise
  • About us
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Contact us
Saturday, December 6, 2025
Australian Times News
  • News
    • Weather
    • Sport
    • Technology
    • Business & Finance
      • Currency Zone
    • Lotto Results
      • The Lott
  • Lifestyle
    • Entertainment
    • Horoscopes
    • Health & Wellness
    • Recipes
  • Travel
  • Expat Life
  • Move to Australia
No Result
View All Result
  • News
    • Weather
    • Sport
    • Technology
    • Business & Finance
      • Currency Zone
    • Lotto Results
      • The Lott
  • Lifestyle
    • Entertainment
    • Horoscopes
    • Health & Wellness
    • Recipes
  • Travel
  • Expat Life
  • Move to Australia
No Result
View All Result
Australian Times News
No Result
View All Result
Home News

With house prices soaring again the government must get ahead of the market and become a ‘customer of first resort’

Overall, homeowners have more disposable income. This has led to an uptick in home improvements, renovations and real estate activity. Media coverage adds fuel to the fire by breathlessly reporting rapid price rises. First-time buyers panic that they will miss their chance.

The Conversation by The Conversation
09-11-2020 18:05
in News
House prices are spiking again

House prices are spiking again Photo by Breno Assis on Unsplash

John Tookey, Auckland University of Technology

House prices are spiking again, with “affordable homes” showing most growth. That’s no surprise really, with multiple factors in play.

GettyImages

Market instability due to COVID-19 is driving asset acquisition — property is the classic port in a storm for investors. Interest rates are at all-time lows and likely to stay that way. The pandemic has curtailed people’s spending, costly holidays are cancelled, socialising is limited and home working has reduced travel costs.

Overall, homeowners have more disposable income. This has led to an uptick in home improvements, renovations and real estate activity. Media coverage adds fuel to the fire by breathlessly reporting rapid price rises. First-time buyers panic that they will miss their chance.

Bottom line: the conditions are in place for a house price boom.

Into this febrile atmosphere stepped the Property Investors’ Federation CEO, claiming first-time buyers were causing recent price rises. The reasoning was that people moving out of a flat to buy a home — one that was previously a rental property — effectively reduce the available housing stock.

This is unfair at best. It shifts blame onto a younger, poorer demographic for reduced cost efficiency and return on investment. Those buyers may be looking to settle down and start a family. They are already largely locked out of the housing market by the depredations of property speculators and investors.

AlsoRead...

Ryan: Building real freedom through e-commerce

Ryan: Building real freedom through e-commerce

27 November 2025
Design Australia Group: Redefining Drafting as the engine of housing growth

Design Australia Group: Redefining Drafting as the engine of housing growth

26 November 2025

The rise of renting

For many years, property investment has been the main way in which New Zealanders have grown their wealth and provided for retirement. Developing a property portfolio is a tax-efficient, cost-efficient option for individuals with surplus wealth.

Capital growth in previous acquisitions leverages funding for further acquisitions, making the process self-sustaining. Better yet, investors can congratulate themselves for offering rental accommodation options that the state does not provide.

Government attempts to limit investment through capital gains taxes or some other mechanism have encountered substantial pushback. New Zealanders want the freedom to invest in property.

The result has been an ever-increasing proportion of the population in rental accommodation and an accompanying decline in the total number of owner occupiers. Over the past 40 years, owner occupancy has declined from 74% nationally to its current 62% (close to 50% in Auckland).

The market alone won’t fix it

House prices — irrespective of media narratives — are not driven by production costs. They are driven by the residual values of existing houses. Like any commodity, scarcity drives values up. Abundance forces values down. Investors and first-time buyers pursuing the same properties create artificial scarcity.

The issue, then, is how to rapidly generate enough housing to meet the demand, given house building is not a rapid process. Irrespective of how many new houses of a particular type are wanted, capacity is constrained.

At best, additional “emergency” housing stock will take several years to be built. New houses are generally commissioned and bought by individual customers, and each house is unique and distinct. To date, most of this type of development has involved large, standalone — not affordable — homes.

This is not a market set up to provide mass housing at short notice. It is certainly not a market to create the housing surplus that would force down values.

Governments should think like builders

The options are clear — moderation of supply and demand, with houses constructed ahead of the market.

But successive governments have failed to recognise builders will not do this of their own accord. So-called “special housing areas” failed because the market drove the development of standalone sections, not high-density plots.

KiwiBuild, the previous government’s ambitious house-building policy, failed utterly. Once again, it was because the government assumed builders would scale up their production and productivity without pre-existing commitment of funding and contracts.

Starting large development contracts without guaranteed customers is risky. Builders have limited resources and will not take on speculative builds.

On the other hand, housing scarcity leads to regular business and reasonable margins. In a volatile economy this is a good place to be. In a free society we can’t simply compel builders to build more. We can only encourage and incentivise them with large contracts.

This is where the government would need to provide the development capital to get ahead of the market — in other words, be the customer of first resort.

Reining in property investors

This does create the secondary problem of the state stepping into a commercial space. Using public funds to favour certain projects and providers will certainly trigger outraged howls of “unfair competition” from those not favoured.

But the demand side could be dampened with various measures to limit property investors and meet the urgent need to wean New Zealanders off property investment by:

  • limiting the number of properties that individuals or household trusts can hold
  • limiting the number of trusts that individuals can hold
  • incentivising divestment of property holdings (in favour of selling to first-home buyers, for example).

The elephant in the room is a capital gains tax on secondary and rental properties — something the current government backed away from during its first term.

Ultimately, though, given a choice between helping first-home buyers into housing or limiting cost-effective property investment, a left-leaning government will likely side with social need over optimising capital formation. To do otherwise would be unacceptable to its voter base.

In the final analysis, the Property Investors’ Federation is likely to be sorely disappointed with future policy.

John Tookey, Professor of Construction Management, Auckland University of Technology

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Tags: SB001
DMCA.com Protection Status

SUBSCRIBE to our NEWSLETTER

[mc4wp_form id=”2384248″]

Don't Miss

The evolution of Aesthetic Surgery through the lens of Dr Kourosh Tavakoli

by Pauline Torongo
4 December 2025
The evolution of Aesthetic Surgery through the lens of Dr. Kourosh Tavakoli
Health & Wellness

As global interest in Australian cosmetic surgery continues to grow, the combination of regulation, research and emerging digital tools is...

Read moreDetails

Ryan: Building real freedom through e-commerce

by Pauline Torongo
27 November 2025
Ryan: Building real freedom through e-commerce
Business & Finance

Ryan’s greatest achievement isn’t any single business or revenue milestone — it’s the ecosystem he’s built through the Change community.

Read moreDetails

Design Australia Group: Redefining Drafting as the engine of housing growth

by Pauline Torongo
26 November 2025
Design Australia Group: Redefining Drafting as the engine of housing growth
Business & Finance

Australia is under pressure to build homes faster, but design bottlenecks slow progress. Design Australia Group is fixing this by...

Read moreDetails

Louis Guy Detata builds Global Trading Empires through autonomous systems and disciplined leadership

by Pauline Torongo
25 November 2025
Louis Guy Detata builds Global Trading Empires through autonomous systems and disciplined leadership
Business & Finance

The path from investment banking to leading a global trading platform has taught Louis Detata that sustainable success requires more...

Read moreDetails

Burning Eucalyptus Wood: Tips, Advantages, Disadvantages & Alternatives

by Fazila Olla-Logday
20 November 2025
Image Supplied
Enviroment

Learn about burning eucalyptus wood for stoves and fireplaces. Discover benefits, drawbacks, harvesting tips, and better alternative firewood options for...

Read moreDetails

Everything Parents Need to Know About Baby Soft Play and Why It’s a Game Changer

by Fazila Olla-Logday
11 November 2025
Everything Parents Need to Know About Baby Soft Play
Health & Wellness

Baby soft play is a fun, safe, and educational way for little ones to explore and grow. Discover the benefits...

Read moreDetails

WOMAD Sets Up a New Camp in Wiltshire – Australian festival fans take note!

by Kris Griffiths
11 November 2025
Kumbia Boruka brought their reggae and dancehall flavour to the Taste the World Stage at WOMAD 2024 - Credit - Mike Massaro
Entertainment

With its 2026 edition moving to Neston Park in England, WOMAD offers Aussie music lovers a chance to reconnect with global...

Read moreDetails
Load More

Copyright © Blue Sky Publications Ltd. All Rights Reserved.
australiantimes.co.uk is a division of Blue Sky Publications Ltd. Reproduction without permission prohibited. DMCA.com Protection Status

  • About us
  • Write for Us
  • Advertise
  • Contact us
  • T&Cs, Privacy and GDPR
No Result
View All Result
  • News
    • Weather
    • Sport
    • Technology
    • Business & Finance
      • Currency Zone
    • Lotto Results
      • The Lott
  • Lifestyle
    • Entertainment
    • Horoscopes
    • Health & Wellness
    • Recipes
  • Travel
  • Expat Life
  • Move to Australia

Copyright © Blue Sky Publications Ltd. All Rights Reserved.
australiantimes.co.uk is a division of Blue Sky Publications Ltd. Reproduction without permission prohibited. DMCA.com Protection Status

No Result
View All Result
  • News
    • Weather
    • Sport
    • Technology
    • Business & Finance
      • Currency Zone
    • Lotto Results
      • The Lott
  • Lifestyle
    • Entertainment
    • Horoscopes
    • Health & Wellness
    • Recipes
  • Travel
  • Expat Life
  • Move to Australia

Copyright © Blue Sky Publications Ltd. All Rights Reserved.
australiantimes.co.uk is a division of Blue Sky Publications Ltd. Reproduction without permission prohibited. DMCA.com Protection Status