Improvement in affordability
Housing affordability has shown improvement across Australia, except for Queensland where it has remained stable, according to research from the Real Estate Institute of Australia and Adelaide Bank.
REIA president Malcolm Gunning said the September quarter edition of the Adelaide Bank/ REIA Housing Affordability Report found rental affordability improved in all states and territories except for Victoria and Tasmania.
‘‘NSW showed the most improvement in housing affordability over the quarter and the Northern Territory showed the most improvement in rental affordability,’’ he said.
‘‘Over the quarter the proportion of median family income required to meet average loan repayments decreased by 0.8 percentage points to 31.4 per cent, while the proportion of median family income required to meet rent payments decreased by 0.2 percentage points to 23.9 per cent.’’
Across the country, the number of loans decreased by 4.8 per cent, with drops in all states and territories, the largest in the Australian Capital Territory (-7.8 per cent).
New loans also decreased by 11.9 per cent from the same quarter last year.
All states and territories showed an annual decline in new loans except for Tasmania where there was a 2.7 per cent increase.
The decline ranged from 17.6 per cent in Western Australia to 4.4 per cent in South Australia.
‘‘Despite improved housing affordability, the number of firsthome buyers decreased by 2.0 per cent in the quarter.
‘‘However, the results are mixed around the country with large increases in the Northern Territory (14.7 per cent) and a decline in Western Australia (-5.7 per cent).
‘‘The decline in first-home buyers is systematic of the credit squeeze that is emerging,’’ Mr Gunning said.
‘‘While APRA’s restrictions were designed to curb high risk lending practices the current practice of reducing loan amounts and increasing approval times across the board is becoming a constraint on economic growth.’’
❝While APRA’s restrictions were designed to curb high risk lending practices the current practice of reducing loan amounts and increasing approval times across the board is becoming a constraint on economic growth.❞
— REIA president Malcolm Gunning