Making housing a human right requires systemic change

April 22, 2025
Issue 
Neither Anthony Albanese nor Peter Dutton want to challenge the neoliberal approach to housing. Image: 麻豆传媒

In the 1950s, a house cost about three times the annual average wage. Today, it鈥檚 more like eight times. The political fall-out from this housing affordability crisis is gathering momentum.

Voters under 40 now outnumber 鈥淏oomers鈥, threatening to change the electoral arithmetic. With these storm clouds on the horizon, Labor and Liberal have been desperate to assure younger voters that there is a path to home ownership.

The Coalition proposes to allow new home buyers a tax deduction on interest payments, in addition to allowing them to access their superannuation to service a mortgage.

Labor鈥檚 new policy, the First Home Guarantee, allows first house buyers to access a loan with only a 5% deposit, with the government stepping in as guarantor for the rest of the deposit. Labor is also continuing its Help to Buy scheme, in which it takes a share in the property.

As economists have explained, like any market subsidy without an enforced price cap, the Coalition and Labor proposals will inflate prices by the same amount, much like the first homeowners grant did.

To the extent that they acknowledge that spiralling property prices are a problem, Labor and the Coalition focus on pumping more private properties for sale into the market.

For the Coalition, that means providing $5 billion for infrastructure to service new housing estates. Labor is allocating $10 billion to build 100,000 new homes, exclusively for first home buyers, and launching a Build-to-Rent program that the Property Council estimates will deliver about 80,000 additional units over a decade.

Labor also proposes to fund the construction of 30,000 new social housing dwellings 鈥 a miniscule amount compared to waiting lists across the country.

True to form, Opposition leader Peter Dutton is trying to deflect attention from decades of bipartisan policies that have inflated property prices by blaming immigration for overheating demand.

Absent from both major parties are measures that would stop and reverse the cost to buy a house and, in particular, stop or slow the increase in rents.

The truth is they don鈥檛 want to.

For all the froth and bubble about making the 鈥淎ustralian dream鈥 accessible for all, keeping banks, investors, landlords and speculators onside remains their true priority.聽

Dutton is sometimes honest about this. When asked at a press conference on April 15 if he wanted house prices to rise or fall, he replied: 鈥淚 want to see them steadily increase 鈥 I don鈥檛 want to see a situation where Labor crashes the economy and somebody who鈥檚 paid $750,000 for a house today is worth $600,000 in 18 months鈥 time under an Albanese government.鈥

Let鈥檚 be clear: Dutton wants to blame migrants for the cost of housing and increase the cost of housing at the same time!

Socialist Alliance proposes as starting measures the scrapping of negative gearing and capital gains tax exemptions, limiting rent increases to the consumer price index, banning no-fault evictions and embarking on a program to seriously expand the stock of public housing.

It鈥檚 only in Australia that these proposals are seen as radical or extreme. It has the weakest protections for private tenants among Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development nations, and public housing stock is a miserable 4%, compared to 20% in Denmark.

While capital gains tax exemptions and negative gearing are a wholly unjustified subsidy to landlords and property investors, which are set to cost us over $20 billion in lost tax revenue in a decade, it鈥檚 not just the big banks and property tycoons that Labor is afraid of offending if it adopts these policies.

Over the last four decades, Labor and the Coalition have implemented neoliberal policies. This means pensions have failed to keep pace with the cost of living, social services have been wound back聽and employment insecurity has become widespread.

Faced with this, working people on higher incomes have been encouraged, in fact incentivised, to buy an investment property to guarantee themselves a liveable income in retirement. It鈥檚 the fears of these 鈥淢um and Dad鈥 property investors that Dutton seeks to stoke, and that spooks Labor.

In fact, guaranteeing every citizen access to dignified affordable housing should be seen as a basic obligation of government.

The erosion of this understanding, including in the minds of many working people, is a sign of what will happen to healthcare and education 鈥 if we let it happen.

Turning this around is a political battle we have to win. However, making housing a human right cannot be won in isolation.

When people, including workers who own their own home, see the super rich being made to pay more tax and their own tax payments pay for services that improve everyone鈥檚 lives, including their own, then negative individualistic thinking can be challenged, and not just on housing.

Labor can鈥檛 lead this fight, because its policies in government, and not just on housing, have helped create the problem.

There is no easy road either. Regardless of the election result, the true balance of power will remain in the hands of the Coalition and Labor, which remain committed to maintaining the unjust and grotesque situation.

Winning this battle will involve connecting a vision for systemic change to grassroots housing campaigns, including the fight to defend and extend public housing, strengthen protections for tenants and impose rent caps.

is committed to doing that, throughout the election campaign and beyond. .

[Sam Wainwright is a national co-convener of the .]

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