The Guardian Australia

Victoria first-homebuyers double after housing affordabil­ity reforms

- Melissa Davey

Housing affordabil­ity reforms introduced by the Victorian government in July have seen a doubling in the number of first-homebuyers compared with the same period last year.

Figures from the office of the Victorian treasurer, Tim Pallas, show then between when the reforms took effect from 1 July, and 12 October, 4,335 first-homebuyers entered the market. In the identical period in 2016, there were 2,033 first-homebuyers.

The key reforms included abolishing stamp duty for firsthomeb­uyers of properties valued up to $600,000, and reducing stamp duty on homes valued between $600,000 and $750,000. The firsthomeb­uyers grant was also doubled to $20,000 for those willing to buy their first home in regional Victoria.

The number of first-homebuyers in regional areas has increased almost fivefold, the data obtained by Guardian Australia shows. There were 319 first-homebuyers in regional Victorian between 1 July and 12 October compared with 66 in the same period last year. Greater Geelong and Greater Bendigo were the most favoured regions.

Data from the state revenue office shows there hasn’t been a coinciding increase in property prices as some analysts feared.

Pallas told Guardian Australia that the government was now in discussion­s about how to introduce requiremen­ts on developers to include a minimum amount of inclusiona­ry zoning for affordable housing as part of all-new developmen­ts. The state currently offers surplus government land for sale to developers at a discounted price so long as a proportion of it is allocated to social housing.

“We don’t want to jump into inclusiona­ry zoning requiremen­ts in a way that frightens new developmen­t out of the market,” Pallas said. “We need to walk before we run on this stuff.

“But if we make this a requiremen­t, and it would effectivel­y be a tax on developers by the state, we’d need to offer developers a value propositio­n in return. So that could be things like saying ‘If you do certain things in terms of greater access to first homeowners, we can look at what we can do for you in terms of intensific­ation of developmen­t and guaranteed infrastruc­ture in communitie­s to increase the saleabilit­y of new developmen­ts’.”

The reforms to stamp duty and first-homeowners grants were followed by measures aimed at making the rental market more affordable and stable, and from 1 July investors were no longer eligible for the stamp duty concession­s for new property.

“Helping people move into affordable and secure housing was our priority and we have done it in a way that has comparativ­ely disadvanta­ged investment,” Pallas said. “We are not against investment, but if we have to make a choice between getting people into homes or getting people into their third, fourth or fifth investment property, it’s getting people into their first homes.”

Pallas called on the federal government to do more to assist first-homebuyers, saying he was “positively jealous” of the levers the government had at its disposal including making changes to negative gearing and capital gains tax.

However the chief executive of the Grattan Institute, John Daley, said historical data showed there was always an increase in firsthomeb­uyers in the early months following an abolishmen­t or reduction of stamp-duty. Longer term, the data showed that the property market did become more expensive as a result of stamp-duty concession­s, he said.

“Now that effect usually takes a little while to come through, so in the short run first-homebuyers quick off the mark will buy a bit more cheaply, but as first-homebuyers get used to it prices go up, so then you get the same amount of first-homebuyers as always but with higher property prices,” he said.

Examining ways to make inclusiona­ry housing mandatory as part of new developmen­ts was a positive step by the government, he said.

“It won’t increase housing stock, but it will lead to more neighbourh­oods with people from different background­s,” he said. “At the moment developers tend to build units all the same and you get people of similar circumstan­ces moving into them, so you wind up with homogenous neighbourh­oods.

“Increasing diversity is one of the most important reasons for having inclusiona­ry housing.”

Professor Billie Giles-Corti, an RMIT urban planning expert, said the Victorian government should be praised for trying to address difficulti­es for first-homebuyers.

“I find it a bit rough when commentato­rs only pick up on the negatives of these government policies,” she said.

“I congratula­te the Victorian government for doing this and we need all of these reforms in attempts to address the issue. But we must encourage comprehens­ive long-term evaluation of these policies and address any unintended consequenc­es as they arise.”

 ??  ?? An increase in first-homebuyers often follows in the immediate months following an abolishmen­t or reduction of stamp-duty, according to the Grattan Institute. Photograph: David Crosling/AAP
An increase in first-homebuyers often follows in the immediate months following an abolishmen­t or reduction of stamp-duty, according to the Grattan Institute. Photograph: David Crosling/AAP

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