Friday, March 29

‘We must separate the idea of ​​house from home’: the case for drastic action on shelter | Tone Wheeler


Iinequality is the greatest threat to our society, and nowhere is that inequality more evident than in housing. The rich get richer with ever more houses; the poor get rent stress or homelessness. And inequality will only grow with the rising incidence of housing crises resulting from natural disasters like fire and flood.

“Housing is absolutely essential to human flourishing”, wrote the American sociologist Matthew Desmond. “Without stable shelter, it all falls apart.”

the housing policies of the major parties are ineffective against this rising inequality; some are even counterproductive. Nevertheless, the coming federal election gives an ideal opportunity to discuss just how radical a change is needed.

Two-thirds of Australian households have the security of owning (or paying off) a house, which is increasing in value faster than any other investment. But the other third struggle to rent those increasingly expensive houses. Current political discussion focuses on the former: how to make houses “more affordable” to buy, with lip service paid to renters, who are consigned to “affordable housing” – as if such a thing exists.

This dichotomy lies at the basis of the failure of our current housing policies.

Counterproductive ‘solutions’

Lack of supply and low interest rates are popularly held to blame for spiraling house values, making a first home purchase out of reach for many. But increasing supply and putting up interest rates won’t fix the problem.

We have enough supply already: there are more houses than households, although some (holiday houses) are not available for full-time occupation. Low interest rates are only useful if you have a deposit, which is also increasingly out of reach unless you (or your parents) already have a house.

The proffered solutions will only make the situation worse: the shortfall is nowhere near enough to justify opening up huge swathes of land at the edge of our cities, as the Liberal MP Jason Falinski has argued. And every attempt to help first home buyers with a grant or reduced deposit has seen house prices rise in response. Totally counterproductive.

Several years of low interest rates have seen a rapid rise in house prices beyond their real value, encouraging those who already have a house to acquire another to use for income. Covid has only accelerated that process, in two ways.

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Firstly, working from home prompted many to move to the regions. Cashed-up, they pay city prices for houses, reducing affordability in areas of lower wages and pushing up rents. This forces the locals, many of whom rent, to move out of town.

Secondly, closed borders created a rise in local tourism and holiday rentals within Australia. So, the smart money buys a second or third house in a holiday destination and then puts it on highly lucrative short-term rental services such as Airbnb. That formerly reasonably priced house is no longer available for long-term occupation or rental. The decrease in available properties means higher rents.

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The two issues have combined to destroy the liveability of many towns, particularly on the east coast. In holiday towns like Byron Bay, or regional centers like Kiama, the general population – particularly key workers – are priced out of the places they have lived in for years or generations.

‘A home is a safe refuge from the world’

Current political analysis misses the root cause: high house prices benefit the majority over the minority, and with many voting for parties to protect their property wealth, Australia has been uninterested in solving the inequality problem. It requires drastic action.

We must separate the idea of ​​house from home. A house is property, an investment increasing in value, a possible source of income. A home is shelter, a safe refuge from the world, at home. It physically protects and promotes mental wellbeing. Sometimes it is referred to as the third skin.

Every household, family or single, is entitled to a safe and secure home. We need shelter before property. A home before an income-generating investment. We should ensure that everyone has a home (to buy or rent) before anyone has a second house.

The aim should be to lift home ownership rates from below 65% to above 80%, and to ensure that the remaining 20% ​​can rent equitably within the market, and that those who can’t – the poorest 10% – are protected in properly resourced social housing.

But how to go about that revolutionary idea? To change us from an investment-property-owning gerontocracy to a home-for-all loving nation?

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Tax the investment, not the home

We need to promote the viability of a household’s first home and discriminate against a second or third house as investments. That requires a change in banking and tax policy.

Banks must be encouraged (or forced) to have mortgage policies that lend at substantially lower rates for first home buyers than for speculative investments. The requirements for a deposit can be met with innovative schemes by governments. If necessary, insurance policies can bolster nervous bankers to guarantee mortgages.

Housing tax policy should be the inverse of the present: negative gearing should be on the home only, and every second or more house should be treated as an income-producing investment. Many OECD countries have tax breaks on the family home; we alone (now that New Zealand has canceled negative gearing) seem to want them on investments.

The other tax policy we need is on unearned capital gains. Profiting from a rise in house prices, when no value has been added, is obscene when it puts one-third of Australians further into housing stress. The only way to discourage this “speculation without value” is to re-introduce a substantial capital gains tax. Never on a home, but the tax on profit gained – outside house improvements and the rate of the inflation – could be taxed at rates as high as 80% to immediately halt the rise in house prices.

Home ownership was a core tenet of the Liberal party under Robert Menzies. It created a tradition and an industry, backed by banks and real estate.

It needs to be their policy again, even if it means a change in how taxes are levied. Unfortunately, the recent Senate housing inquiry went in the opposite direction.

These simple steps could raise home ownership to 80% of all households. They are a complete anathema to all the major parties, but that is no reason not to lobby for them to overcome home inequality.

A radical rent reform

We need policies that encourage equitable rent. Again, a tax policy is the best way forward by separating out long-term rentals from short-term (holiday) lettings.

Significant tax breaks should be offered for houses that are long-term rented at a predetermined market value. This could be achieved by requiring houses to be managed by Community or Social Housing Providers (CHP, SHP), who fix the rentals at reasonable market rates (say. up to 4% of land and house value) for fixed periods of not less than one year, but up to ten or twenty years, as it happens in Scandinavia.

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The CHP or SHP would ensure that the owners of the houses would get a reasonable return, aided by tax breaks (like negative gearing), while renters get a more reliable rental market with safety protections.

On the other hand, should an owner wish to rent the extra house(s) as holiday lettings, then significant taxes and insurances would apply – determined in comparison to the level of service provided by commercial renters such as hotels. This has long been a flu of hoteliers, whose livelihood depends on substantial investments and ongoing costs that the Airbnb lessees avoid.

The aim would be to regulate the market without prescribing how the owner uses the house. Houses could be rented in one of two ways: long-term with rebates, or short-term with taxes. The returns are similar in either scenario, which can be tweaked as supply and demand dictate.

Again, equity relies on taxes, which one party always promises lower, and the other thus intimidated into saying nothing.

Homes not Housing

Shelter is a basic right, along with food, clothing and safety. We don’t have a bill of rights in Australia and our constitution is entirely silent on our built environment, but home ownership used to be a core Australian value.

Housing is the largest single part of our wealth, but it is unequally distributed, which is why we need to redress that inequality. We need to change our policies from encouraging property investment to encouraging home ownership.

We need a home policy, not a housing policy.

This article was originally published in Architecture and Design magazine. Tone Wheeler is the principal architect at Environa Studio, an adjunct professor at UNSW and is the president of the Australian Architecture Association


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