Bangkok Post

PM defends housing plan as campaign nears end

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SYDNEY: Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison yesterday defended his election pitch to allow first-time buyers to use part of their retirement savings to buy homes in a bid to lure younger voters as the campaign entered its final week.

Mr Morrison, trailing in polls ahead of the national election on Saturday, put housing at the forefront of his election campaign amid criticism that the decision will further drive up prices forcing more people out of the market.

“It’s your money, you’ve earned it and you’ve saved it in your superannua­tion,” Mr Morrison told Channel Seven yesterday.

Mr Morrison said he did not see house prices rising from his policy, announced during the launch of the Liberal Party’s campaign on Sunday.

More money on deposit will lower mortgage payments providing an “added layer of comfort to our first home buyers,” he said.

Under Morrison’s plan, first home buyers can dip into their retirement savings for up to A$50,000 (1.2 million baht) to raise a deposit.

Cheap loans fuelled a housing boom last year, a windfall for household wealth, but also hitting affordabil­ity.

Prices surged 22.4% last year, the biggest increase since June 1989, with the notional value of Australia’s 10.8 million homes rising by A$2 trillion to A$9.9 trillion.

Rising living costs, rated the most critical issue by voters in some polls, have put pressure on Mr Morrison’s Liberal-National coalition, that has a one-seat majority in the lower house of parliament.

Centre-left Labor, ahead in polls, described the policy as “the last desperate act of a dying government”.

“It just pushes prices up. This is like throwing kerosene on a bonfire,” Shadow Minister for Housing Jason Clare told ABC television.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Prime Minister Scott Morrison speaks in Sydney on May 8.
REUTERS Prime Minister Scott Morrison speaks in Sydney on May 8.

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