The 2026 Australian budget's tax reforms aimed at housing affordability are insufficient because they fail to address the fundamental supply gap: the National Housing Accord's target of 1.2 million dwellings by 2029 is already 120,000 behind, with approximately 750,000 approved housing projects stranded due to developer viability issues, while rising population growth and migration (projected at 225,000) continue to outpace housing construction capacity.
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Chalmers' budget targets housing affordability, but misses supply | Alan Kohler | ABC NEWS追加:
Well, the centerpiece of the budget was tax reform to improve housing affordability, which was either a courageous or deceitful broken promise, depending where you stand.
It was necessary, though, because the national housing accord plan to build 1.2 million dwellings by June 2029 isn't working.
They're 120,000 behind already and not much chance of catching up.
And there are two problems. First, the accord is about approvals, and that's not the problem.
They are falling short of target, but a lot more houses are being approved by councils that are being built, which is disguised by a statistical quirk.
The ABS doesn't collect development applications data, only construction certificates, which is the final step before building starts.
Now, discussions with the industry and councils suggest each state is sitting on at least 100,000 approvals that aren't getting built. So, about 3/4 of a million houses and flats look stranded because the developer can't make the project stack up.
The second thing is the population growth is not falling as expected. In fact, it's rising.
The latest data for net overseas migration is for September last year, when migration and population growth both increased.
Now, more recent data on long-term arrivals suggest it continues to rise.
So, in the budget, Treasury has had to increase its forecast for it.
But, it is still saying that migration will fall to 225,000 in 2 years' time, or about 100,000 fewer than last year.
Now, if that forecast comes true, then the current level of housing completions will more than meet demand and bring house prices down.
But, for some reason, the government won't turn that forecast into a target.
The oppositions, both of them, are talking about migration targets, and it's now a key political battleground.
Well, maybe that's the next bit of courage that's needed from the government. Turning its migration forecasts into targets,
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