Nelson Mail

Govt keen housing LVRs end

- HENRY COOKE

Finance Minister Grant Robertson says it would make sense to remove large deposit requiremen­ts on home buyers, as his government is cracking down on speculatio­n in other ways.

The Reserve Bank will release its six-monthly update on the state of the banking system this morning, in which it is expected to set criteria for the removal of its loanto-value ratios (LVRs).

LVRs were introduced in 2013 to cool the rapidly rising housing market. They require most people applying for a home loan to stump up a deposit of at least 20 per cent. The move has been criticised for making it harder for first-homebuyers to get onto the ladder.

The bank described LVRs as ‘‘temporary’’, but did not set a clear criteria for when they would be removed.

Robertson said Labour had long been worried about LVRs but respected the independen­ce of the Reserve Bank.

He expected Acting Reserve Bank Governor Grant Spencer would be ‘‘well aware’’ of the Government’s moves to restrain speculatio­n and increase demand, and would take them into account when making his decision.

Asked whether he thought the Government’s new measures would cool the market enough to make LVRs unnecessar­y, Robertson said ‘‘that’s right’’ – but noted again that the Reserve Bank was independen­t.

‘‘The issue is [the policies] take a little bit of time to come onstream and take effect.’’

The Government is planning to increase the ‘‘bright line test’’ to five years, meaning anyone who sold a property that was not their family home within five years would have to pay income tax on any capital gains. They are also looking to dramatical­ly increase supply with the 10-year, 100,000-home KiwiBuild plan.

Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said the Government’s policies would mean the Reserve Bank would not be the only safety valve on the market.

‘‘Our hope is that our agenda, the work programme that we have around housing, will ease the pressure on the housing market, so that we don’t have the Reserve Bank as the only way to try and cool the market.’’

She also said she would respect the independen­ce of the Reserve Bank.

In its Monetary Policy Statement early in November, the bank said it expected the impact of the Government’s 100,000 new KiwiBuild homes would be about halved, because of all the private homes that would not be built because builders were working on KiwiBuild. The Government disputed this.

National Party leader Bill English repeated what he said in August as prime minister – that it was time for the bank to give some detail on when LVRs would be lifted.

‘‘The whole point of the loan-tovalue ratios was to prevent risk to the system from too many people borrowing at very high ratios for houses – the bank is the ultimate supervisor of the risk, if they think in the future the risks are a bit lower then they can change it,’’ English said.

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