Awww, and I was sure that this was going to be the year my paycheck finally did more than keep me alive until the next one…
The fundamental problem with housing in Australia
Submitted 1 day ago by Zagorath@aussie.zone to australia@aussie.zone
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2025-02-10/housing-crisis-hypocrisy-lip-service/104915610
Comments
TheCriticalMember@aussie.zone 1 day ago
Walk_blesseD@lemmy.blahaj.zone 1 day ago
Once again, I’m not a tankie, but Mao was definitely onto something with the landlords.
Zagorath@aussie.zone 1 day ago
This is the problem with tankies. By supporting the worst things about communist governments, they make people hesitant to support the actually really beneficial aspects of communism.
Walk_blesseD@lemmy.blahaj.zone 1 day ago
💯
WhatAmLemmy@lemmy.world 1 day ago
The fundamental problem with housing EVERYWHERE is that it’s a finite resource and we allow individuals and orgs to own multiple.
All of the neoliberal and conservative measures to date were a lie designed to either inflate the cost of housing, or not have any meaningful impact while sounding like it does. Most would be completely unnecessary if we only allowed citizens and perm residents to own 2 properties max, including their PPOR; banning every other entity from owning residential property entirely.
Zagorath@aussie.zone 5 hours ago
I’m not generally a fan of bans. I’d rather just see the tax incentives to owning multiple homes behind your PPOR removed. And, if people do own multiple homes, there should be strong incentives to actually rent it out, such as a vacant home levy, and much, much stronger tenants’ rights protection to enable tenants to treat their home as the home that it is.
austin@aussie.zone 12 hours ago
One word: Immigration. If we dont admit this then we can scream into the echo chamber forever but its not improving!
Zagorath@aussie.zone 11 hours ago
No, blaming immigration is just a racist scapegoat. The amount of housing being built far outstrips the number of new households due to immigration. The problem is that the number of houses being bought by investors (instead of first home buyers) is almost equal to the number of new houses being built. Which is a problem caused by our incredibly harmful policies that treat housing as a financial instrument more than a right that people need to have. There’s also a huge number of completely empty homes—again, a problem caused by pro-investor policies.
There are also issues with our council policies around what kinds of housing can be built where. Restrictive zoning laws that prevent more efficient medium-density housing, instead of most of our cities being made up of low density zoning that uses obscene amounts of land, and a preference to use the highest zoning possible in the smallest number of places possible, when low density is not sufficient (which is more expensive per capita due to the higher costs of materials, labour, and technical requirements associated with high rises compared to 2–4 storey row houses and apartments). And a severe lack of investment in public housing from our state governments.
Tax incentives. Public housing. Zoning laws. This is a problem created by all three levels of government. But immigration? Not a significant factor.