Article World Homepage.
  Number Times Read : 32    Word Count: 895  
Categories

Advice
Aging
Arts
Arts and Crafts
Ask an Expert
Automotive
Banking
Break-up
Budgeting
Business
Business Management
Cancer Survival
Career
Cars and Trucks
Casinos
Causes and Organizations
Cell Phones
Cheating
College and University
Computers
Computers and Technology
Cooking
Crafts & Hobbies
Culture
Culture and Society
Current Affairs
Dating and Relationships
Death
Disease & Illness
Domain Names
Drop Shipping
E-Commerce
Electronics
Entertainment
Environment
Etiquette
Ezines and Newsletters
Family Concerns
Fashion
Fiction
Finance
Finances
Financial Planning
Food and Drinks
Forums
Gadgets and Gizmos
Gambling
Gardening
Health & Fitness
Home
Home & Family
Home Business
Home Improvement
Home Management
Human Resources
Import Export
Infants and Toddlers
Innovation
Inspirational
Insurance
Intellectual Property
Internet
Internet Business
Jobs
K-12
Medical Business
Medicines and Remedies
Men Only
Motivational
Motorcyles
Nature
Opinions
Our Pets
Personal Development
Pets and Animals
Podcasting
Pregnancy and Family Pla
Presentation
Product Reviews
Quotes
Recreation
Recreation & Sports
Recreation and Leisure
Reference & Education
Relationship
Religion and Spiritualit
Screenplay
Search Engines
Self Help
Self Improvement
Selling
Shopping
Short Stories
Society
Speaking
Sports
Structured Settlements
Supplements and Vitamins
Team Building
Technology
Telecommuting
Telesales
Television
Tools & Resources
Travel
Travel & Leisure
Video
Web Development
Weddings
Wellness, Fitness and Di
Womens Interest
Work Life Balance
World Affairs
Writing & Speaking
 
Stats
Total Articles: 602305
Total Authors: 48018




 
   

The Inconvenient Facts about the Queensland Housing Affordibility Crisis



[Valid RSS feed]  Category Rss Feed - http://www.1articleworld.com/rss.php?rss=254
By : Robert Bell    29 or more times read
Submitted 2008-11-04 00:00:00
There was a lot of media coverage during the election campaign about Australian housing affordability and the new Rudd government has promised to come up with a solution. What what can they really do?

Here are I believe the major contributors to the problem. Many of these are the unintended consequences of government policies and societal trends. There is no quick remedy and any commentator who says there is an easy solution is delusional.

Unrealistic expectations
I grew up in a 2 bedroom weatherboard house in south Brisbane. It was 12 squares (including patio), had an external laundry and a lovely big back yard with a sand pit.

No double-lockup garage, no rumpus room, no games room, timber floors, no pool, no aircon, no fans, just a paintedwooden house with a Hills Hoist and some great trees. It worked just fine. No Monty Python luxury sketch here.

The impression I get these days is that young people expect to buy a house of at least equal standard to what they grew up in. You know, brick veneer, carpets, five bedrooms, aircon, and so on. What I saw as luxuries to be added over time, these people see as the minimum standard.

The social status of tradesmen
Good tradespeople are very skilled, rare and in short supply. For some strange reason over the last 30 or so years Australian society has not encouraged school graduates to get a trade. University attendance and a job wearing a suit is seen as the life goal to aspire to.

The result has been a dilution of the trade gene-pool with kids who could have been outstanding plumbers, tilers or brickies, becoming very average white collar workers.

The recent property and mining boom has seen tradespeople’s yearly incomes rise dramatically. Good luck to them, booms come and booms go.

I’ve heard stories of recruitment firms driving around residential building sites stalking tilers. They ask them what their hourly rate is, offer to double it, then produce an employment contact.

Unfortunately you need well paid tradespeople to build houses. This building now costs more because the input costs are higher. The GST didn’t help, but it is only a minor factor.

The Cost of moving residence
Stamp duty, agent fees, moving costs and the other associated human and financial costs of moving to a different type of housing encourages people to update what they have rather than sell up an move. This means people are doing additions rather than moving. This drives up the cost of existing housing and limiting the supply of starter homes.

Similarly, these human and financial costs of moving also encourage people who could quite happily live in a smaller property to rattle around in what they have because moving is too hard and too expensive. They also may wish to hang on to their house with the goal to handing it on to their children when they eventually pass away.

Increasing divorce rates since 1975
Currently 40 percent of Australian marriages are expected to end in divorce. The effect of this is that you end up with a lower average person to property ratio.

Both halves of the splitting couple want their own house. Fair enough. But for the period that each half is single and living alone (or with their kids), there is one less property in circulation.

At a very rough guess I expect that for every divorce in Australia there is one less property in circulation for an average period of at least 5 years.

In 2006 there were over 51,000 divorces. That’s over 51,000 people looking for a new place to live.

Longer life expectancies
Because people are living longer there are less properties coming onto the market through deceased estates. Obviously, if a group of people stay in their property for an extra 15 - 20 years there are less properties on the market. Once again, longer life expectancy is a good thing, but it does limit the number of properties coming on to the housing market.

Policy to keep older people at home
To compound the last factor even further, the federal government actively encourages older Australians to get older at home rather than use up beds in aged care facilities.

They do this because it is far more cost effective for the taxpayer, and is popular policy and gives older people a better quality of life.

Peak Oil and the cost of the work commute

Rising oil prices and town population density growth means that it costs more money and time for people to travel to and from work. The cost of travel is pushing up the cost of housing close to work and city infrastructure. How would you invest your money. Say you had a choice between buying a residence for $500,000 5 kms away from work with good access to public transport and buying a house for $350,000 25kms from work. With no access to public transport? What would you choose?

Many people might stretch the $500k option knowing it will save them 60 minutes per day in travel time, $90 per week in private transport costs (petrol, wear and tear, rego, insurance and so on), and they will have an asset that will appreciate at far greater than the rate of inflation.

The trouble is that as houses in inner cities increase in value, there is a knock-on effect out in the outer suburbs. Even suburbs with poor infrastructure.


Author Resource:- John Hacking is the writer of Australian Travel Blog. He is also Product Manager of a Brisbane web design firm.
Article From 1Article World
 
New Authors
select
Free Sign Up
select
Learn More
 
Nav Menu
Home
Login
Submit Articles
Submission Guidelines
Link Directory
About Us
Contact Us
Privacy Policy
RSS Feeds

Actions
Print This Article
Add To Favorites

 

 

Disclosure: You should assume that the owner of this website is an affiliate for the provider of goods/services mentioned on this website. Sometimes the owner may get paid a commission if you purchase the product when following a link.