Viet Nam News

Australia PM announces homes policy

- REUTERS

Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison announced a housing policy yesterday aimed at boosting home ownership and curbing high prices, as his government lags the opposition Labor Party days before a general election.

Australian­s will vote for a government on Saturday, with recent polls showing Morrison's Liberal-national coalition on track to lose to centre-left Labor, which would end nine years of conservati­ve government.

Morrison's Liberal Party formally launched its campaign in Brisbane yesterday, with Morrison detailing the housing policy at the event in a lastditch appeal to voters.

“This will increase the opportunit­y for people to downsize, and increase the

supply of family housing stock in the market,” Morrison said.

The policy aims to encourage older Australian­s to sell the family property, Morrison said. It would enable those aged over 55 to sell a home and invest up to A$300,000 (US$200,000) in a superannua­tion fund outside existing caps.

The policy is an effort to put downward pressure on high house prices in an election campaign that has been dominated by cost-of-living concerns, national security and climate change.

Morrison said a re-elected coalition government would allow first home buyers to use a "responsibl­e portion" of their superannua­tion savings to buy a house, calling it a "a game changer" for thousands of families.

The campaign launch comes after Morrison vowed on Saturday to be more empathetic if he wins re-election,

after conceding he could be a "bulldozer" and promising to change.

Labor leader Anthony Albanese backed the housing initiative for older Australian­s, describing it as a "modest announceme­nt".

His party said that if it won government it would spend A$1 billion on advanced manufactur­ing to boost jobs and diversify the country's industrial base.

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