The Chronicle

Greens ‘vacancy tax’ deeply flawed - REIQ

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THE Green Party’s ‘vacancy tax’ is poorly researched, lacks credible data and is deeply flawed according to the REIQ.

REIQ CEO Antonia Mercorella said the policy was a massive disincenti­ve to investing in Queensland real estate and if it was introduced it would result in placing unfair financial costs on property owners while failing to address the problem it aims to solve – a perceived lack of affordable housing.

“This policy adds yet another layer of cost to owning real estate in Queensland.

“The Greens claim this policy will raise $800 million over five years, but that would require an annual median house price growth of a whopping 8.6 per cent for five consecutiv­e years,” Ms Mercorella said. “That’s simply prepostero­us.”

“Anyone with a passing knowledge of the Brisbane property market would know our market has been growing at around 3-4 per cent over the past few years,” she said.

The Greens make no mention of the cost of implementi­ng the program.

“Who is going to monitor and regulate this? There’s an enormous level of red tape being added to the property sector with this flawed policy,” Ms Mercorella said.

Rather than gather Brisbane LGA data, the Greens have assumed Brisbane’s breakdown of vacant residentia­l property between houses and apartments is identical to Melbourne, which is 40 per cent of vacant properties being apartments while 60 per cent were houses.

“There are some disturbing assumption­s made in this poorly considered policy. Brisbane is significan­tly different to Melbourne and so any calculatio­ns based on the assumption that these two cities are identical is clearly flawed.

“Based on our calculatio­ns, the likely revenue would be vastly less, not in the hundreds of millions, as the Greens would have you believe,” Ms Mercorella said.

A third of Queensland­ers rent their home (34 per cent) and the market relies very heavily on private landlords providing rental accommodat­ion.

“This policy is written for a tight rental market where vacancies are low but Brisbane’s vacancy rate is 3.6 per cent, and this market offers many affordable options for renters.

“Anything that is a massive disincenti­ve

to owning property will result in investors moving their money elsewhere. The majority of property investors in Queensland are mum-and-dad investors who are planning for their retirement. Why are the Greens focused on punishing them?”

Real estate is one of the State Government’s single biggest revenue sources and the profession employs around 34,000 Queensland­ers.

The Greens have also announced a policy banning no-fault tenancy terminatio­ns. This policy would prevent landlords having the right to end a tenancy at the agreed contract end date, but would allow tenants to continue a tenancy until it suited them to end it.

“Their assault on property owners is unceasing and they are trying to paint the everyday property investor as some kind of Dickensian greedy fat-cat slumlord out to rip off the hapless tenant.

“Landlords want good tenants and want long-term relationsh­ips to minimise turnover and ensure longer term security for their investment.

“But the impact of the Greens’ ill-considered, fiscally irresponsi­ble policies will be to drive investors to other forms of investment.

“This will leave renters in the unfortunat­e position of having to compete for fewer rental properties, driving up price and disadvanta­ging the lower socioecono­mic renter,” Ms Mercorella said.

A vacant property tax has been introduced in cities such as Paris and Vancouver, where population­s are vastly bigger than Brisbane and rental accommodat­ion is tight. It is also being implemente­d in some suburbs of Melbourne, at 1 per cent of the capital-improved value.

The conditions in these larger, more densely populated cities is vastly different to Brisbane and this type of policy is simply inappropri­ate.

“The REIQ calls on the major parties to denounce these policies that would ultimately be destructiv­e to the real estate sector and detrimenta­l to Queensland­ers.”

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