100% Locally Owned, Independent and Free

100% Locally Owned, Independent and Free

Jane Stephens: it's time to shift our way of thinking to stop the housing merry-go-round 

Do you have a news tip? Click here to send to our news team.

Readers’ voices matter to SCN: have your say

Sunshine Coast News (SCN) is asking our loyal readers to help us deliver more free and independent news by completing an anonymous market intelligence More

Buyers scramble for luxury apartments in heart of Coast

Strong demand is driving competition for high-end apartments in a bustling area of the Sunshine Coast. Buyers have been jostling for position in Maroochydore, particularly More

Odour concerns prompt intervention at hinterland facility

An organic waste processing facility on the Sunshine Coast has been ordered by state authorities to investigate the source of odours and implement a More

Veteran basketballer selected for Australian team

A 77-year-old Sunshine Coast veteran basketballer is set to represent Australia on the international stage. Mooloolaba resident Murray Browne was selected for the Australian men’s More

Future takes root with 25-year vision

A nature-inspired playground, new visitor and community hub and expanded lakeside facilities are among the projects proposed under a 25-year blueprint for one of More

Airport redevelopment reaches new milestone

The next stage of Sunshine Coast Airport's major redevelopment is beginning to take shape. Construction of the airport's new arrivals precinct and baggage claim area More

It is all about attitude.

We live in an era where home ownership sits cheek by jowl with adulthood: for generations, you have made it when you buy a house because you have invested in yourself and your future. It just feels sensible.

Primally, having a home of your own also feels secure and safe – a place to hunker down when the cold winds blow and the world closes in.

But a huge portion of our society will never own where they live, and the skyrocketing sales prices are forcing that portion upwards.

Renting must cease being looked at as the second prize for those who can’t own a home, and embraced as an acceptable way of living.

Socially and politically, we must stop looking at housing primarily as a financial asset and focus on it as a human need.

Housing is a complex issue, made messy by the combination of matters of the heart and cold, hard money making.

For starters, there is consensus among economists that negative gearing favours investors’ interests over others.

Phasing it out would see rental prices fall and help affordability, but Heaven help the political party that does that, as they bravely did in New Zealand last year.

The Reserve Bank this week said incentives laid out to goad the economy along had contributed to the kick-on housing problems we are now suffering.

Subsidies such as first home buyer grants and HomeBuilder boosted demand for homes and that helped push up house prices, knocking many out of the market and cementing their place in the tightest rental market in living memory.

Home prices have climbed dramatically during the past couple of years. Picture: Shutterstock.

Help keep independent and fair Sunshine Coast news and opinion coming by subscribing to our free daily news feed. All it requires is your name and email. See SUBSCRIBE at the top of this article.

But governments cause problems, then are heroes for helping solve them, such as our State Government’s much-touted $1 billion Housing Investment Fund, the largest social and affordable housing outlay in Queensland history.

And around we go.

The incoming Commonwealth Labor Government’s shared-equity scheme, which allows eligible first home buyers to share up to 40 per cent of the purchase price with the Government, is also likely to be jumped on.

But buying on such a small deposit is risky, particularly with rising interest rates and a housing market downturn likely in coming years. If a house is worth less than the debt held against it, things can quickly turn bad – and it is unclear whether the government would share the downside risk if the property had to be sold.

Do you have an opinion to share? Submit a Letter to the Editor with your name and suburb at Sunshine Coast News via: news@sunshinecoastnews.com.au

We need a shift in attitude.

Housing co-operatives work brilliantly in places such as Sweden and Finland, where they hold about 20 per cent of the housing stock. Far from the hippy commune or social housing stamp held here, it means more investors and renters get better.

Living in a house that suits the size of a family instead of sized to impress would help make room for more people of differing circumstances too.

In matters of human rights and needs such as housing, the head, heart and community must all be accommodated.

Jane Stephens is a USC journalism lecturer, media commentator and writer. The views expressed are her own.

 

 

Subscribe to SCN’s free daily news email

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
This field is hidden when viewing the form
[scn_go_back_button] Return Home
Share