How many new houses for NZ are enough?
The Government is throwing billions of dollars, along with new planning rules, at the housing shortage, but experts say the country is still years away from having enough houses.
On Thursday, Housing Minister Megan Woods announced funding of $1.4 billion for infrastructure to allow the construction of about 16,000 new houses in Auckland.
It would allow the building of 6000 Kā inga Ora homes and 10,000 affordable and market homes, as well as provide capacity for development of another 11,000 homes on privately owned adjacent land.
That meant there could be up to 27,000 new homes built over the next five to 16 years. The funding came from the $3.8b Housing Acceleration Fund, which pays for infrastructure to speed up the pace and scale of residential development.
When it was announced last March, Woods said it would help green-light tens of thousands of new houses in the short to medium-term.
New housing densification rules were also announced last year, and PWC analysis estimated they would add between 48,200 and 105,500 new homes to the housing stock over the next five to eight years. The funding and planning rules aim to address the severe shortage of housing, but how many new houses is enough?
Kiwibank chief economist Jarrod Kerr said his team’s modelling of the housing market showed there was a 65,000 shortfall nationwide, with most of it in Auckland.
It would take a long time and lots of building to make up that deficit, especially as another 20,000 to 30,000 houses were needed in Auckland alone, he said.
‘‘The closed borders during the pandemic and the expected outflow of Kiwis as they open up again does take the pressure off the market a bit. But
Jarrod Kerr
Kiwibank chief economist
migrants will return, and that will increase demand again.’’
Shortage of supply had been one of the main drivers in recent price increases, and as more supply came on to the market it would affect prices, Kerr said. ‘‘But good things take time, and it will be years before the housing shortage is resolved.’’
AUT construction professor John Tookey said Auckland’s ‘‘massive’’ shortfall had developed over decades due to a planning approach that had not supported development.
Redressing that, and setting up systems and infrastructure that allowed for the successful growth of the city required further initiatives and more funding, he said.
‘‘Funding like that announced on Thursday is an essential first step towards developing the necessary infrastructure for the future of Auckland. Will it solve the problem in its entirety? No. It’s a step in the right direction but at the current levels it is little more than a drop in the bucket of what is needed.’’
Independent economist Tony Alexander said how the extent of the shortfall was estimated depended on what was considered a desirable household occupancy rate.
In 2001, Auckland had an average occupancy rate of 2.94 and by 2018 it was 3.15, so to return the city to the 2001 rate 37,000 new houses would be needed, Alexander said.
‘‘But the occupancy rate across the rest of the country was 2.68 in 2018. It would take 87,000 houses to get Auckland’s rate back to that.’’
At the same time, there were high levels of building in Auckland and the city’s population had fallen slightly, with more people expected to head overseas. That meant discussion about over-building was likely to pick up pace later this year, he said.
‘‘None of this changes the fact we have a fundamental shortage of social housing. It makes up less than 4% of our housing stock, compared to an OECD average of 8%. We have also tended to build bigger, more expensive new homes, so we have a significant shortage of entry-level housing for first-home buyers.’’
‘‘. . . good things take time, and it will be years before the housing shortage is resolved.’’
suggested it may cut off gas exports to more states after suspending shipments to Poland and Bulgaria during the week.
In an overnight address, Zelenskyy echoed cries of Russian ‘‘blackmail’’ against European nations, which together with the US have sent billions of dollars of weaponry and aid to humanitarian groups and front-line fighters to Ukraine.
Moscow ‘‘is just waiting for the moment when one or another trade area can be used to blackmail Europeans politically, or to strengthen Russia’s military machine, which sees a united Europe as a target,’’ Zelenskyy said.
Meanwhile, the death toll – estimated in the tens of thousands between civilian and military losses – continued to climb.
The regional governor in Luhansk, Serhiy Haidai, said Thursday that four people were killed in strikes over the previous day, including an 85-year-old who died after a hospital was hit in Severodonetsk. Writing on the messaging app Telegram, he said dozens of residents had fled the towns of Lysychansk and Popasna in the last day.
In Donetsk, regional military administration leader Pavlo Kyrylenko said on Telegram that 27 houses in the village of Lastochkine were destroyed in the latest attacks. Kyrylenko did not list any casualties.
Despite the fighting, some
Anto´ nio Guterres UN Secretary-General
‘‘So, the war is an absurdity in the 21st century . . . the war is evil.’’
parts of Ukraine, in particular central and western areas, have maintained a relative sense of normality amid air-raid sirens as residents remain on alert of war.
In Dnipro, in central Ukraine, the business of everyday life appeared to continue Thursday without much disruption. The streets were full of cars, pedestrians walked through the parks to get to their workplaces, and trams and buses operated normally. Outside the city, where the buildings give way to farmland, tractors dug fresh furrows in fields covered with Ukraine’s characteristic black soil, while other workers prepared the land for the coming harvest.
Fears of the war spilling beyond Ukraine’s borders have increased.
Strikes were reported this week in Transnistria, a proRussia breakaway region in Moldova, also known as TransDniester, that’s northwest of the Ukrainian city of Odesa. The Transnistria government, which has thousands of Russian troops