The Gold Coast Bulletin

Building starts remain sluggish

- Jack Quail

Building approvals remained sluggish in February, with softer than expected results indicating a worsening of the weak run of new housing constructi­on in recent months.

Total dwellings approved, an indicator of the residentia­l constructi­on pipeline, slipped 1.9 per cent over the month, the Bureau of Statistics reported on Thursday, with just 12,520 new homes signed off for constructi­on, according to the seasonally adjusted figures.

The reading was far weaker than the 3 per cent increase anticipate­d by economists.

Data for housing permits can be exceptiona­lly volatile from month to month, and later subject to large revisions, but home constructi­on rates have trended sharply lower since their peak in March 2021, diving more than 45 per cent.

Indeed, the monthly read meant only 163,100 new homes received approval in the 12 months to the end of February, the lowest since March 2013’s year-ended reading.

Despite the overall monthly decrease, the result was buoyed by an uptick in permits issued for detached dwellings, which rose 10.7 per cent to 8404.

However, more volatile approvals data for units, apartments and townhouses dived 24.9 per cent, to 3771 – its lowest reading in 12 years.

The anaemic reading for new housing permits is especially pressing given that from July 1, the government’s target to build 1.2 million welllocate­d homes over five years begins, requiring the constructi­on of 240,000 homes on a year-ended basis.

The housing sector is being closely watched by economists as evidence that the RBA’s aggressive run of interest rate increases to a 12-year high of 4.35 per cent is flowing through the economy and slowing consumptio­n as intended.

Financial markets are fully priced for 25 basis points worth of unwinding in monetary policy by September.

Alongside high interest rates, legacy impacts of the Covid-19 pandemic including labour and material shortages have caused the housing market to seize up in the last 12 months.

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