ID :
15031
Wed, 08/06/2008 - 10:51
Auther :
Shortlink :
http://m.oananews.org//node/15031
The shortlink copeid
Sydney has 'most expensive housing'
(AAP) - Sydney has become the world's most unaffordable housing market because of misguided government policies, a think tank analysis says.
Research by the Institute of Public Affairs (IPA) says the fall in house prices in
the United States has left Sydney as the most expensive housing market in the world.
Analysing data from US-based consultancy Demographia - which examines house prices
from 159 urban areas around the globe - it said Melbourne, Perth, Brisbane and
Adelaide are also in the top 10 most unaffordable cities following the US sub-prime
crisis.
The average Sydney home costs over eight times the average household income in that
city.
IPA director of the deregulation unit Dr Alan Moran said misguided government
polices were the culprit of Australia's unaffordable housing market.
He said the cost of Sydney homes was inflated by laws which restricted the
availability of land, imposed lengthy bureaucratic procedures, increased the cost of
building new homes for environmental requirements and charged high taxes
"masquerading as development levies", Dr Moran said.
"These measures are preventing all but the most affluent young buyers from getting a
toehold in the housing market," he said.
"It is clear that regulatory restrictions are fuelling the high cost of building new
homes."
He said areas like California and Britain had seen recent price collapses and were
seeing fewer and fewer new homes built.
"By contrast, (US) cities with few regulatory restrictions - such as Atlanta,
Houston and Dallas - have seen stable prices in the housing market," Dr Moran said.
Research by the Institute of Public Affairs (IPA) says the fall in house prices in
the United States has left Sydney as the most expensive housing market in the world.
Analysing data from US-based consultancy Demographia - which examines house prices
from 159 urban areas around the globe - it said Melbourne, Perth, Brisbane and
Adelaide are also in the top 10 most unaffordable cities following the US sub-prime
crisis.
The average Sydney home costs over eight times the average household income in that
city.
IPA director of the deregulation unit Dr Alan Moran said misguided government
polices were the culprit of Australia's unaffordable housing market.
He said the cost of Sydney homes was inflated by laws which restricted the
availability of land, imposed lengthy bureaucratic procedures, increased the cost of
building new homes for environmental requirements and charged high taxes
"masquerading as development levies", Dr Moran said.
"These measures are preventing all but the most affluent young buyers from getting a
toehold in the housing market," he said.
"It is clear that regulatory restrictions are fuelling the high cost of building new
homes."
He said areas like California and Britain had seen recent price collapses and were
seeing fewer and fewer new homes built.
"By contrast, (US) cities with few regulatory restrictions - such as Atlanta,
Houston and Dallas - have seen stable prices in the housing market," Dr Moran said.