SBD wrote: ↑Thu Mar 28, 2024 10:53 pm
Page 2 includes a long article that includes a quote that housing construction was already slowing. Nobody (in the article or here) has attempted to either challenge or explain that statement.
There seems to be plenty of land "released" for housing. Has somebody done an analysis of what is missing and any attempts to address it? Are builders leaving the industry because aged carers get paid more? a few years ago, there were a bunch of building companies went broke, mostly because they offered fixed-price construction with variable-priced inputs. Is that still the problem?
Perhaps housing construction has slowed because builders keep going bust? or perhaps also it's a case of how data is viewed? I mean if there's housing waiting in the pipeline, because a) fewer building companies & b) taking longer to secure tradies to do jobs, then obviously there's going to be a delay in homes being built?
Wasn't there also meant to be an uptick in approvals, and builders taking on more work then they could complete (presumably due to the high prices that they want to take advantage of and turn a bigger profit) which has created a back log?
https://grattan.edu.au/wp-content/uploa ... r-2021.pdf
Have briefly skimmed through this, but there's a graph on page 9 that's pretty damning.
The only solution our governments seem to have, is "bring in more people from the third world".
How much has our population grown in the last 20-24 years? And they just want to keep adding more and more. There's your number 1 reason why the housing crisis is as bad as it is, and why it will get much worse in the next few years if their intention to flood us with another 2 million people proceeds, which it will.
This country needs and deserves better politicians.
Politicians who are actually going to address the problems this country has, with real solutions, with a vision and plan.
We've fallen behind the rest of the OECD on wage growth, a 6% decline was it in the last 12 months?
We've fallen behind housing stock compared to the OECD.
Dare we look what else we may have fallen behind on or gone backwards compared to the rest of the developed world?