Don鈥檛 blame migrants for the housing crisis

March 18, 2024
Issue 
Today鈥檚 wildly speculative housing market is less about housing than about the land beneath it. Image: Canva

Want to buy a typically-priced house in Gadigal/Sydney? As of December, the cost of that median residence was $1,595,310, up 10.6% from 2022. Across all Australian capitals, the was 7.8%.

For perspective, that put the ratio of housing prices to household income in Sydney at 13.3 times, making the city the second most unaffordable in the world after Hong Kong.

A median-priced house in Naarm/Melbourne last year would set you back 9.9 times annual household earnings, not far behind San Francisco. Even Kaurna Yerta/Adelaide, at 8.2 times, was .

For rents, the story has been similar, with prices spiralling far beyond pay rises and the broader inflation rate. In the 12 months to December, Australian rents rose nationally by 9.1% cent for houses, and by 13.1% for units.

The reached $580, or 44.6% of median weekly earnings of about $1300. If you鈥檙e in a single-income household, you鈥檙e probably deep into rental stress, usually understood as any figure above 30%.

Clearly, a heist of epic proportions is under way, stripping wealth from poorer and younger people.

But what鈥檚 the underlying cause? Why the housing madness?

Too many migrants?

That, increasingly, is what the financiers, the big property-owners, and their spin-doctors and shock-jocks are telling us.

Here, for example, is a headline from the late last year: 鈥淗ousing and migration have collided. One will have to give.鈥

Migrants, unfortunately, are the easy-to-blame scapegoats.

Following the lifting of COVID-19 restrictions, underwent a temporary surge over the 2022鈥23 financial year, to a total of 518,000 people.

Reading the comments beneath news sites, it鈥檚 not hard to find gems like this: 鈥淭hese 518,000 immigrants have displaced AT LEAST 518,000 resident citizen Australians from housing 鈥︹

But a thoughtful reading of the statistics, plus a dash of historical perspective, yields a very different picture.

First, what counts for housing purposes is not the immigration totals but the rate of population increase. This has slowed markedly in recent times, higher immigration notwithstanding.

According to the Macrotrends site, Australia鈥檚 population growth in the three years to the end of 2023 was around 1% annually, with a predicted figure for this year of 0.98%.

These are since the 1930s Great Depression.

Intriguingly, recent population growth has been only a fraction of the rates of the 1950s and 1960s. Those decades are remembered as a time of rapid housing construction, when the tradition of Australia as a nation of homeowners became established.

Federal government figures show that between 1946鈥1970 averaged 2.2%.

During the 1950s and 1960s, booming migration was overlaid on high rates of natural increase. Between 1946鈥1972, women could expect to give birth, on average, to 3.1 children during their lifetimes. This 鈥渇ertility rate鈥 has declined and, in recent years, has stood at 鈥 well below the 鈥渞eplacement value鈥 of about 2.1 children.

Without large numbers of migrants, it is clear Australians would die out. Saving us from extinction is just the start of the favours that migrants do for us. The favours include bringing with them much-needed skills in categories that include experienced, job-ready building trades people.

Housing shortages

If providing abundant, affordable housing was possible in the 1950s and 1960s, when the population was growing at more than twice the present rate, what is different now?

The basic problem, as so often, lies in the capitalist system 鈥 and in the fact that its priority is private profits, not public needs.

Homes for the millions are not where the big profits lie. Think instead of harbour-frontage penthouses or Hills Face mansions.

In housing statistics, the category 鈥渧alue of building approved鈥 has shown a in the past 10 years. This indicates that residential construction has shown a marked tilt toward the upper price bracket.

Where the market fails, deliberate government measures are essential.

Between 1945鈥1970, made up 16% of all Australian house building. In 1954, built a mammoth 47% of all new dwellings in that state.

As well as meeting mass needs, the large government presence in home-building mopped up demand and dampened speculative pressures.

But those days are long gone. Over the past decade, public and community housing construction has made up of the total. Now the market rules and caters to those who can pay.

Government policies aimed at buying the votes of established homeowners have worsened the situation.

Tax provisions, such as negative gearing and capital gains concessions, have enticed the well-heeled to buy up residential properties 鈥斅爊ot to live in, but to trade for profit. 鈥淗ot money鈥 has poured into the housing sector, creating a vortex of rising prices.

In theory, high prices should prompt a rise in supply, taking the steam out of the market. But, in fact, last year was well below the level a decade earlier. For the weakness in housing construction, analysts cite causes such as and high interest rates.

The land factor

Ultimately, however, the housing price explosion rests on another factor, one that the pundits mostly underplay. Again, this reflects the irrational, unplannable nature of capitalism.

Some 70% of people, according to the Australian Bureau of Statistics, live in just eight large cities. For capitalist firms, the advantages of big-city locations are usually compelling 鈥 proximity to suppliers and customers, a large pool of skilled workers and availability of a wide variety of necessary services.

Workers, generally, have little choice but to go where the jobs are. Either they pay extortionate sums for inner-city housing or they face exhausting commutes.

In the 1960s, new housing sprawled onto relatively cheap farmland, still usually within bearable distances from workplaces.

Now, of course, things are very different, and oddly, today鈥檚 wildly speculative housing market is less about housing than about the land beneath it. Except during the pandemic, rises in housing construction costs have tracked the quite closely and, last year, were significantly lower.

Strictly speaking, it is urban land prices that have gone berserk.

Instead of creating dysfunctional mega-cities, a social system that put people鈥檚 needs ahead of private profits would have planned over many decades to distribute the population more rationally.

Why not several dozen intelligently placed cities of 1 to 2 million people, big enough to provide efficiencies but still highly liveable?

Why not a consistent stress on medium and high-density housing, that would use land sparingly and improve the economics of public transport?

It is not the fault of migrants that Australian capitalism has lacked the vision, and the ability, to bring such things to fruition.

Nor are migrants responsible for the tax legislation that now fuels housing inequality. On housing issues, nevertheless, migrants are the targets of a campaign of distraction 鈥 insidious, at times vicious, and bearing a distinct tinge of racism.

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