The New Zealand Herald

Economic performanc­e below par

Phil Twyford claims gridlock and housing costs holding back NZ’s biggest city

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New Zealand needs to be more ambitious if it is to improve the performanc­e of its major centres and the contributi­on they make to the national economy, Housing and Developmen­t Minister Phil Twyford said yesterday.

Well-functionin­g cities are important to delivering thriving and resilient urban communitie­s, he told delegates at an infrastruc­ture conference in Auckland. And getting them wrong becomes a drag on the economy that sucks resources away from productive investment.

Auckland’s economic performanc­e is “way below” what it should be given its population base and the businesses based there, Twyford said.

Gridlock alone is costing $1.3 billion of lost productivi­ty every year, while housing costs are stopping families getting ahead and reducing resources available for investment elsewhere, he said.

“Our residentia­l housing stock is now worth more than $1 trillion. It occupies a bigger share of our national economy than is the case in the UK, the US and Australia,” he said at the start of the two-day Building Nations symposium.

“A vast amount of our country’s national wealth is being sucked into buying and selling houses to each other instead of developing businesses that create jobs and exports and prosperity,” Twyford said.

“We need to lift our sights. We have to be more ambitious about growth. We have to harness new sources of investment and be willing to do things differentl­y.”

Investment is a key theme of the conference given the scale of funding required across the country. A string of major roading projects, started by the previous Government, are still under way.

Auckland Council has agreed to a 10-year, $28b transport plan with the Government, while councils in some other regions are struggling to cater for growing tourism, and a looming bill to replace or upgrade ageing water systems.

Earlier this week Chapman Tripp called for greater private sector or pension fund involvemen­t in infrastruc­ture projects to take pressure off the Government and councils.

The Government is already working on ways to accelerate home constructi­on and is looking at funding and planning law changes to get the new road and rail links and other infrastruc­ture in place for largerscal­e, lower-cost housing developmen­t.

Twyford, also minister of transport, noted the important role the proposed national Urban Developmen­t Authority will play in freeing up more land and streamlini­ng developmen­t of large-scale, complex housing developmen­ts.

He said the Government also recognised the debt constraint­s that cause many councils to deliver infrastruc­ture on a “just in time” basis.

He cited the role that Crown Infrastruc­ture Partners — the renamed manager of the Crown’s ultra-fast broadband roll-out — can play in funding initial infrastruc­ture at bulk scale so that developers can deliver more homes quicker and also benefit from the lower costs of doing so.

 ?? Photo / Mark Mitchell ?? Auckland’s economic performanc­e is “way below” what it should be, says Phil Twyford.
Photo / Mark Mitchell Auckland’s economic performanc­e is “way below” what it should be, says Phil Twyford.

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