Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-fbnjt Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-10T10:17:35.117Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Australian local governments and affordable housing: Challenges and possibilities

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 January 2023

Alan Morris*
Affiliation:
University of Technology Sydney, Australia
Andrew Beer
Affiliation:
University of South Australia, Australia
John Martin
Affiliation:
La Trobe University, Australia
Sandy Horne
Affiliation:
University of South Australia, Australia
Catherine Davis
Affiliation:
University of Technology Sydney, Australia
Trevor Budge
Affiliation:
La Trobe University, Australia
Chris Paris
Affiliation:
Ulster University, UK
*
Alan Morris, Institute for Public Policy and Governance, University of Technology Sydney, Broadway, Sydney, NSW 2007, Australia. Email: alan.morris@uts.edu.au
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

For an increasing proportion of Australian households, the Australian dream of home ownership is no longer an option. Neoliberal housing policy and the financialisation of housing has resulted in a housing affordability crisis. Historically, Australian housing policy has afforded only a limited role to local government. This article analyses the results of a nation-wide survey of Australian local governments’ perceptions of housing affordability in their local government area, the possibilities for their meaningful intervention, the challenges they face, the role of councillors and councils’ perceptions of what levels of government should take responsibility for housing. Almost all of the respondents from Sydney and Melbourne councils were clear that there is a housing affordability crisis in their local government area. We apply a framework analysing housing policy in the context of neoliberalism and the related financialisation of housing in order to analyse the housing affordability crisis in Sydney and Melbourne. We conclude that in order to begin resolving the housing crisis in Australia’s two largest cities there has to be an increasing role for local government, a substantial increase in the building of social and affordable housing and a rollback of policies that encourage residential property speculation.

Type
Original Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s) 2020

Introduction

For the past 60 years, Australia has been a nation characterised by good-quality housing for all, with a strong public housing safety net for those unable to compete in the private market. Australians have enjoyed high housing standards with most attaining the ‘The Great Australian Dream’ of home ownership (Reference Badcock and BeerBadcock and Beer, 2000). However, Australia is increasingly confronted by escalating challenges with its housing: it has one of the most unaffordable housing markets in the world (Demographia, 2013), a diminishing stock of public housing (Steering Committee for the Review of Commonwealth/State Service Provision (Australia) (SCRCSSP), 2013), decreased outright ownership (Reference Flood and BakerFlood and Baker, 2009), and pockets of poverty and disadvantage in the rental sector (Reference Hulse, Burke and RalstonHulse et al., 2012). Despite government programmes, each night more than 100,000 Australians are homeless (Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS), 2012), and almost 2 million people live in unaffordable housing (Reference Bentley, Baker and MasonBentley et al., 2012). Many of Australia’s housing problems are increasing – homelessness, poor housing affordability, housing insecurity, reduced outright ownership and the undersupply of new dwellings (ABS, 2012; Reference Beer, Faulkner and ParisBeer et al., 2011; Reference Flood and BakerFlood and Baker, 2009; Reference Hulse, Burke and RalstonHulse et al., 2012; Reference MorrisMorris, 2016; Reference Wood and OngWood and Ong, 2011).

These changing conditions have fuelled a search for new policy solutions in housing, and the desire to recruit a new range of actors – including local governments – into the formation of housing policies and programmes. Conventionally, housing policy in Australia has been the preserve of State and Federal governments (Reference ParisParis, 1993). In the period 1945–1980, an uneasy accommodation on housing policy and programmes emerged, with the Australian Government establishing macro-policy settings for housing via interest rates and the provision of finance for social housing, while state governments served as ‘reluctant landlords’ (Reference HaywardHayward, 1996). Little attention was paid to local governments (Reference Stilwell and TroyStilwell and Troy, 2000) despite their significant, but muted, role in the delivery of housing services and urban development (Reference NeutzeNeutze, 1977). In the 1970s and 1980s, modest attention was given to the potential for greater local government involvement in the direct provision of housing. For a short time, the Whitlam Labor Government’s experiments with ‘New Federalism’ appeared to provide a platform for direct Federal support for local government programmes. The Local Government Community Housing Program (LGCHP), however, proved to be short-lived, with more established policy instruments favoured from the mid-1980s onwards.

Throughout the 21st century, there has been a consensus that housing affordability is a major issue in Australia, most evidently in the country’s two largest cities, Sydney and Melbourne (Reference Gurran, Rowley and MilliganGurran et al., 2018; Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA), 2017). However, there is minimal knowledge of how local governments in Australia perceive and have responded to this issue, both now and in the recent past. This article examines the changing role of local governments in Australia in ensuring the supply of affordable housing, and draws on a national survey of this, the third tier, of government in Australia to draw conclusions on the nature and direction of change. In seeking to develop deeper insights into this set of questions, the article draws upon both the financialisation of housing framework (Reference AalbersAalbers, 2016) and writings on neoliberal housing policy (Reference Beer, Kearins and PietersBeer et al., 2007; Reference JacobsJacobs, 2019; Reference Madden and MarcuseMadden and Marcuse, 2016); the two approaches are used to explain the housing crisis in Sydney and Melbourne and the lack of government action.

Local government and housing affordability in Australia

There is a substantial body of work in Australia that has acknowledged that local governments have the potential to exert a significant impact on the affordability of housing through the implementation of planning codes and the application of infrastructure levies (Australian Local Government Association (ALGA), 2003; Reference Beer, Kearins and PietersBeer et al., 2007; Reference GurranGurran, 2003; Reference Gurran, Ruming and RandolphGurran et al., 2008; Reference Purdon and BurkePurdon and Burke, 1991; Reference Tiley and HillTiley and Hill, 2010). Research has also found local governments are active in areas of housing policy where their involvement is unexpected: Reference Beer and PranceBeer and Prance (2012), for example, noted 65% of councils engage with homelessness, although this often found expression as a series of informal practices rather than acknowledged policies. In addition, almost half of all local governments in Queensland are involved in the direct provision of housing, either as a provider or as a major shareholder in a registered social landlord (Local Government Association of Queensland (LGAQ), 2014). There is, of course, variation: there are 534 local governments in Australia and it would be misleading to suggest there is a single relationship between housing and local government. Rather, this relationship varies by geography – rural, regional, metropolitan – the size of the individual local government, its level of development and the state framework within which it sits. The latter is especially important, with Reference GurranGurran (2003) noting the differences in format and content of planning instruments and regulatory frameworks within and between the Australian states. There is also considerable divergence in the level of autonomy granted by states to local government in the housing domain (ALGA, 2003: 5; Reference Beer, Kearins and PietersBeer et al., 2007).

Australia is one of a number of nations where the relationship between the housing system and local government has changed. In many developed economies, the implementation of neoliberal policies and the financialisation of housing markets have resulted in the sell-off of social housing, and the stigmatisation and residualisation of these who remain in this stock (Reference Watt, Watt and SmetsWatt, 2017). For example, in London, the sell-off of social housing saw the proportion of housing rented from the local authority drop from 18.2% in 1961 to 13.5% in 2011 (Reference Watt and MintonWatt and Minton, 2016). The global financial crisis in 2008 and subsequent austerity have led to a virtual halt in the building of social housing in many advanced economies, and an increasing emphasis on shifting management and control from government to housing associations (Reference JacobsJacobs, 2019; Reference Watt, Watt and SmetsWatt, 2017).

Local governments are the least well-funded tier of government within the Australian federation (Reference Brown, Brown and BellamyBrown, 2006), and this resource constraint limits their capacity to take on an active role in ensuring a supply of affordable housing. In 2016–2017, total taxation revenue in Australia stood at AUD488.5 billion of which only AUD17.4 billion (3.6%) accrued to local government (ABS, 2018). In addition, over the past three decades, local governments have felt the impact of ‘cost shifting’ as the national and state governments have transferred some of their responsibilities to local government. Commonly, these transfers have taken place without the reallocation of resources, effectively creating an ‘unfunded mandate’ for local action that can represent a significant cost on local communities (House of Representatives Standing Committee on Economics, Finance and Local Government (Hawker Inquiry), 2003). Local governments have been left to explore new ways of ensuring a supply of housing that is affordable; this has included lobbying state governments to impose a levy on new developments (inclusionary zoning) (Reference Gurran, Rowley and MilliganGurran et al., 2018) and the transfer of council land to community housing providers in order to construct affordable housing (City of Sydney, 2015). These endeavours have had some success, but the overall impact has been minimal.

The housing affordability crisis in Sydney and Melbourne

As discussed above, Australia has a housing affordability crisis, with the nation’s two largest cities at the forefront of this challenge. Increasing housing costs in these cities – as with elsewhere in Australia – has been a consequence of the financialisation of housing (Reference AalbersAalbers, 2016) and the application of neoliberal policy settings (Reference JacobsJacobs, 2019). Reference AalbersAalbers (2016) defines financialisation as

the increasing dominance of financial actors, markets, practices, measurements and narratives, at various scales, resulting in a structural transformation of economies, firms (including financial institutions), states and households.

The impact of neoliberalism on housing policy has been acknowledged for a considerable period (Reference Beer, Kearins and PietersBeer et al., 2007, Reference Beer, Bentley and Baker2016) but recently Reference JacobsJacobs (2019) has distinguished between the flexible neoliberal period and the late neoliberal period, the period post the 2008 global financial crisis. Using the work of Aalbers and others he argued that,

The ‘flexible neoliberal’ period was one in which governments retreated from supply side programmes and encouraged homeownership, deregulation, and privatisation strategies. The ‘late neoliberal/post crisis’ period, according to Aalbers, was one in which governments prioritised quantitative easing and austerity measures as a response to the GFC. The choices made by governments create opportunities for speculative investors, which in turn accentuates inequality.

These two perspectives allow us to argue that the interplay between the financialisation of housing and neoliberal housing policy in Australia has found expression in five key ways: a shift in the way in which residential property is viewed; the implementation and maintenance of government tax policies that encourage speculation in residential property; easy access to credit; the internationalisation of the real estate market; and the notion that government should minimise its role in the provision of housing (Reference AalbersAalbers, 2016; Reference JacobsJacobs, 2019; Reference Madden and MarcuseMadden and Marcuse, 2016). These characteristics contribute towards what Madden and Marcuse have called the ‘hyper-commodification’ of housing (Reference Madden and MarcuseMadden and Marcuse, 2016).

A shift in the way housing is viewed

For most households, housing is conceived primarily as a use value. Its main function is to provide comfortable shelter and an adequate, secure home is viewed as foundational for mental and physical health (Reference Clair and HughesClair and Hughes, 2019). However, the way housing is perceived has changed: rather than being viewed primarily as a home and a private space for the nurturing of self and family members, increasingly it is presented in the media (Reference BourisBouris, 2017) as a preferred means for the accumulation of wealth. This shift in perspective is succinctly described by Reference Madden and MarcuseMadden and Marcuse (2016):

. . . there is a conflict between housing as lived, social space and housing as an instrument for profitmaking – a conflict between housing as home and as real estate. (p. 4, italics in original)

This shift towards housing as real estate is illustrated by the substantial proportion of Australian households who are landlords. In 2016, there were 2.03 million individual property investors in Australia, representing 15.7% of all taxpayers, up from 7.4% in 1989/90 and ‘investors own 27% of Australian dwelling stock by number and 24% by value’ (CoreLogic, 2016). For many, especially those who own their home outright, the determination to become a property investor has been intense. This was driven not only by the perception that property was an attractive investment, but also by the extremely favourable tax regime for property investors.

Government tax policies encouraging the financialisation of housing

While the focus of this article is on the role of local governments in Australia shaping access to affordable housing, analysis cannot overlook the impact of national taxation policy in shifting the way housing is viewed. There have been two key policies that have contributed to this change: negative gearing and a generous capital gains tax for investors. Negative gearing is the term used in Australia to refer to the practice of allowing property investors to lower their taxation by deducting expenses related to the investment property (interest on the loan, depreciation costs, maintenance cost, land taxes, rates, etc.) from their overall income. This can result in a significant reduction in an individual’s taxable income, and comes at a substantial cost to government budgets – estimated at AUD4.5 billion in 2018 (Reference Dawson and SmithDawson and Smith, 2018).

The governor of the RBA has argued that scrapping negative gearing and the capital gains tax discounts would enhance housing affordability by lessening investor activity: ‘It’s likely that it would reduce demand for a while, and if you have less demand for a while, you’d have lower prices and that would take the heat off the housing market’ (cited in Reference OngOng, 2017).

Easy access to credit

Relatively easy access to credit for investors and homeowners has been a feature of escalating housing costs across Australia, and especially in Melbourne and Sydney where strong economic conditions have resulted in growing demand for housing. However, low wage growth has been unable to accommodate escalating housing costs. The substantial share of finance devoted to real estate is a global phenomenon. In many contexts it has become the primary activity of the financial sector:

. . . housing is not simply yet another domain of financialisation. In terms of size and impact, it is the key domain of financialisation. (Aalbers in Reference Aalbers and HailaAalbers and Haila, 2018: 9)

Improved access to housing finance has operated to the benefit of investors rather than those on modest incomes seeking to buy their first home. In April 2017, the governor of the RBA (Australia’s central bank) warned there had been a surge in investor borrowing and that many loans were questionable. He also expressed concern about the high proportion of interest-only loans:

Over the past year, close to 40% of the housing loans made in Australia have not required the scheduled repayment of even one dollar of principal at least in the first years of the life of the loan; only interest payments are required. (Reference LoweLowe, 2017)

The Reserve Bank’s concern found expression in March 2017, when the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority (APRA) instructed banks to reduce the number of interest-only mortgages and to be more restrictive on loans to investors. At this time, investors accounted for more than half the ‘nation’s loan book’ (Reference BagshawBagshaw, 2017). The new rules required banks to limit the flow of new interest-only lending to 30% of total new mortgage lending for residential properties. The restrictions led to a 10.1% decline in new lending to investors in 2017 (Reference YeatesYeates, 2018).

Internationalisation of the real estate market

In the last decade, foreign investment in residential real estate in Australia increased dramatically; this engagement with foreign consumers has added to the financialisation of housing and its transformation from a community of homes to an asset class. In 2008–2009, total foreign investment in residential property in Australia totalled AUD13.8 billion, in 2013–2014, AUD34.7 billion, and in 2015–2016, AUD72.4 billion, representing a 500% increase in less than a decade (Australian Government, 2019). This increase coincided with the housing boom in Sydney and Melbourne. In 2016–2017 and 2017–2018, there was a spectacular decline in foreign investment in residential property: foreign investment in real estate dropped to AUD30 billion in 2016–2017 and to AUD10 billion in 2017–2018 (Australian Government, 2019). This was due primarily to a tightening up by the Chinese authorities of the capacity of individuals to invest outside of China (Reference RogersRogers, 2018).

The notion that the market can resolve housing supply and the decline of social housing

In Australia and globally, neoliberal philosophies have promoted the idea that complex social problems can be solved through a reliance on markets, and that this atomistic, transactional approach has the capacity to empower individuals and communities. The adoption of this perspective has meant the rejection of the view that social housing should be expanded to ensure all households are able to access decent, affordable housing (Reference Watt, Watt and SmetsWatt, 2017). Instead, governments have embraced the argument that households should find their own way in the housing market (Reference JacobsJacobs, 2019; Reference Scanlon, Fernández Arrigoitia and WhiteheadScanlon et al., 2015). However, this focus on markets as the solution to housing for all runs counter to the lived experience of many in Sydney and Melbourne. Income growth in Sydney and Melbourne has not kept pace with rising house prices. Reference Wilkins and LassWilkins and Lass (2018) concluded that ‘since 2012 there has been very little growth, and indeed mean and median weekly earnings fell between 2014 and 2015 and only partially recovered in 2016’ (p. 59). The incomes of female workers also flat-lined. In the under 40 age cohort, home ownership fell nationally from 36% in 2002 to 25% in 2017, while in Sydney, the home ownership rate for persons aged 18–39 plummeted from 29.2% in 2002 to 19.7% in 2014 (Reference WilkinsWilkins, 2017).

Housing stress

In Australia, households are considered to experience housing stress if they are in the bottom 40% of the income distribution and are paying 30% or more of their income for their accommodation. At the 2016 Census, 22% of Sydney households were in housing stress. However, when outright homeowners were removed from the total, some 33% of low-income households experienced housing stress (Reference JandaJanda, 2017). Reference RobertsonRobertson (2017) found that in December 2016, after a 25% deposit, mortgage payments accounted for 42% of average disposable income of a Sydney household and 37.1% of a Melbourne household.

Private renters are more prone to housing stress than homeowners. An analysis of rental affordability in Melbourne and Sydney concluded that in mid-2018, in order to avoid rental stress, a household renting a three-bedroom home in the inner areas of Melbourne and Sydney would have to be earning at least AUD130,000 a year in Melbourne and AUD172,467 in Sydney (Reference KennedyKennedy, 2018). SGS Economics & Planning (2018) concluded that the average Sydney household in the private rental sector spends around 27% of their household income on rent. The same report concluded that the ‘median household’ in greater Melbourne in the private rental sector allocates around 24% of their income to pay for accommodation.

Gaining insights into local government and their perspectives on housing

This article seeks to understand the relationship between Australian local governments and housing in the 21st century. In the context of a rapidly changing external environment and new policy drivers within Australia’s system of government, it has set out to understand how local governments perceive and endeavour to deal with housing issues within their jurisdictions. The article has also acknowledged that Australia is confronted by escalating challenges with respect to housing, as Australia has: one of the most unaffordable housing markets in the world; falling rates of home ownership; increasing levels of housing stress; an inexorably rising incidence of homelessness; a minimal and diminishing stock of public housing; and pockets of profound poverty and disadvantage in the private rental sector. These concerns have fuelled a search for new policy solutions in housing and the desire to recruit a new range of actors – including local governments – into the formation of housing policies and programmes.

A survey was sent to all Australian local governments asking for information on the priority they gave to housing issues within their strategies and daily business, the types of policy tools they have applied to housing questions over recent years, their partnerships with other government agencies and the not-for-profit sector in affordable housing, and their aspirations for housing in their community (Reference Beer, Morris and MartinBeer et al., 2018). The survey was emailed to the 536 local governments in Australia in late September 2017, and the survey closed in February 2018. The CEO, or another relevant person assigned by them, was asked to complete the survey. In total, 213 (39%) of the 536 councils to whom the survey was sent responded to the survey, making it the most extensive survey of local government and housing ever conducted in Australia. After cleaning the data, 178 councils were included in the analysis. We have combined the responses of the 18 Sydney and 13 Melbourne councils who responded and compared the 31 combined Sydney/Melbourne responses to the combined responses of other metropolitan (there were 27 councils in this category), the 63 responses from regional councils and the 57 responses from councils we defined as rural. The Australian classification of local governments was used to classify councils into metropolitan regional or rural (Australian Government, 2015).

This section considers the survey responses and distinguishes the outcomes from Sydney and Melbourne from those from other metropolitan areas, regional centres, and rural and remote areas. It focusses on three key themes: the acknowledgement of the housing affordability challenge; the responsiveness of local governments; and relationships with other tiers of government.

Acknowledgement of the housing affordability challenge

We asked our local government respondents the degree to which their councils considered housing affordability to be a challenge; unsurprisingly, the responses varied by setting (Table 1). What was unexpected, however, was the degree to which acknowledgement of this problem was concentrated in Melbourne and Sydney, where fully 48% of respondents reported that this was a very substantial issue and two-thirds said it was a substantial or very substantial problem in their Local Government Area (LGA). Only one Sydney/Melbourne council said housing affordability was not a problem, while only one-third of other metropolitan respondents said that housing affordability was a problem to a substantial or very substantial extent, and only one-quarter of the respondents in the regional and rural councils had a similar view.

Table 1. In the view of the Council, is there a housing affordability problem in the area?

This question around the perception of housing affordability as a problem was followed by ‘In your estimation, what proportion of housing stock within your Council area could be considered affordable?’. Once again, a rural/global city differentiation was highly evident with 68% of Sydney and Melbourne respondents reporting that less than 5% of their local housing was affordable, compared with 26% in other metropolitan areas. Nation-wide, 43% of councils said that 10% or less of the housing stock in their area is affordable, and just under one-quarter said that 5% or less is affordable. Eight in 10 Sydney and Melbourne councils responded that 10% or less of the housing stock in the LGA was affordable (Table 2) – a view reinforced when respondents were asked ‘How extreme are the challenges, barriers or issues for addressing affordable housing by local governments?’ (Table 3).

Table 2. What proportion of housing stock within your Council area could be considered affordable?

Table 3. How impactful are the barriers to local government addressing affordable housing?

Critically, housing affordability has been recognised as a challenge in many parts of Australia, but the problem is most acute in Sydney and Melbourne. Local governments in these two global cities have come to appreciate the depth of the problem, and have a strong sense of the difficulties any government faces in seeking solutions. As other work has shown, poor access to affordable housing is a problem in all parts of Australia. However, it is only in Sydney and Melbourne that it is perceived to be a threat to the labour market, where 61% of local governments were either concerned or extremely concerned about the impact of poor housing affordability on the ability to attract key workers (Table 4). An important outcome of the housing affordability crisis in Sydney and Melbourne is that a substantial proportion of workers employed in these LGAs have to live a substantial distance from their work-place and spend a considerable amount of time commuting. In Sydney and Melbourne, 61% of the Councils said they were extremely or very concerned about the issue, and another 16% said that they were moderately concerned about ‘the impact of the ability of key workers to live in the local government area due to the high cost of housing’. Just over one-quarter of councils in ‘other metropolitan’ were very or extremely concerned about the issue.

Table 4. How concerned is your Council about the impact of high housing costs on key workers?

The City of Sydney Council has voiced its concern that the lack of affordable housing could have adverse economic and social implications for the city:

The housing affordability crisis, coupled with chronic undersupply of community rental housing presents a challenge to Sydney’s sustainable growth and productivity. Workers in essential urban services must be able to live in or near the city to support urban productivity and enable the economy to thrive. Businesses must be able to attract and retain a diverse workforce. Failure to address these issues can damage Sydney’s reputation as a desirable global city, with broader economic impacts. (City of Sydney, 2015: 9)

In 2018, Clover Moore, the Lord Mayor of Sydney, noted that less than 1% of total housing in inner Sydney can be classed as affordable for essential workers:

It is a social and economic disaster. In 2013–14 alone, the price of homes in the city grew by 11.6% – or nine times the average increase in earnings. For essential workers like teachers, nurses and police, it is an effective ‘lock-out’. (Reference MooreMoore, 2018)

The City of Melbourne (2013) has also identified ‘poor access to affordable housing for low-income key workers’ as a major issue.

Responsiveness

How councils and councillors are responding to housing affordability issues is an important question. Are they endeavouring to find ways to respond to housing affordability issues or are they putting the issue in the ‘too hard basket’? Table 5 indicates that in Sydney and Melbourne, despite almost all councils acknowledging there is a housing affordability crisis, only one council said that finding ways to provide adequate housing is a ‘very substantial’ priority of the council. Another 32% of respondents said it was a substantial priority. In the other metropolitan, regional and rural LGAs, fewer than one in five councils said finding ways to ‘provide adequate affordable housing in their LGA was a substantial or very substantial priority’. It is open to debate whether councils do not view housing affordability as a major issue or whether they have concluded they do not have the fiscal or policy capacity to address the issue. This topic will be taken up again in the discussion later in this article.

Table 5. To what extent is finding ways to provide affordable housing a priority for your Council?

The response to the question ‘To what extent do elected members of Council give housing affordability attention?’ (Table 6) indicated that even in Sydney and Melbourne addressing housing affordability in many councils is not a major focus of elected members. Just under one-third said that they give housing affordability substantial or very substantial attention. Only one respondent in Sydney/Melbourne said that housing affordability is given very substantial attention by their elected members.

Table 6. To what extent do elected members of Council give housing affordability attention?

In other metropolitan councils only 3% of respondents said the councillors in their LGA give housing affordability substantial attention. Nation-wide, only 2% of respondents said that their elected members give housing affordability very substantial attention and another 13% said that they give housing affordability substantial attention. The data suggest that for many elected members, more especially in councils outside of Sydney and Melbourne, addressing housing affordability is not viewed as a priority.

A small number of councils had an explicit housing affordability target (Table 7). In Sydney and Melbourne, about one-quarter of councils said that they had an explicit housing affordability target. Nation-wide, the figure was 12%. This result suggests a low level of engagement with housing affordability across the broad range of local governments in Australia. It could also be the case that having a target is not seen as a realistic or effective policy tool.

Table 7. Is there an explicit housing affordability goal within your council?

The difficulty of having a target is exemplified in the case of the City of Sydney. Its affordable housing target is that by 2030, 7.5% of all housing in the LGA should be affordable housing (City of Sydney, 2016). Despite a range of measures and the target being at the forefront of the City’s housing policy between 2007 and 2017, the number of affordable rental housing dwellings increased by about 100 homes annually, from 447 to 835 dwellings; another 586 were in the pipeline, making a total of 1451 (City of Sydney, 2017, 2018). By 2030, it is estimated that there will be 148,000 homes in the City of Sydney. Thus, in order to reach the target of 7.5% by 2030, 11,100 affordable homes would have to be built, about 800 a year, about eight times the present rate. The City of Sydney request that the New South Wales state government develop policies that will substantially increase the quantity of affordable housing have been largely ignored (City of Sydney, 2015). In line with neoliberal housing policies, the state government has insisted that the problem around affordability is mainly one of supply, and resolving housing affordability should be left to the market (New South Wales (NSW) Government, 2016).

Relationships with other tiers of government

In our earlier discussion, we noted that, historically, housing policy and programmes have been the responsibility of state and federal governments in Australia, and that these two tiers of government have had both the resources and the constitutional mandate to address housing questions. This view continues to inform the views of those working in local government across Australia (Table 8) with only one respondent indicating that local government should be responsible for addressing the problems associated with housing. A common view among respondents was that housing is predominantly a state responsibility, with some role – often funding – for the federal government. However, half of all respondents believed that responsibility for housing policy and programmes in Australia sat with the combination of all levels of government, which implies some role for municipalities and shires.

Table 8. Who would your Council say is responsible for addressing housing problems in Australia?

The lack of federal government leadership on the issue of housing was a second pressing concern for local government respondents, with just over 60% of Melbourne and Sydney based councils stating that they were extremely or very concerned (Table 9). The result does indicate the concern around housing affordability in Sydney and Melbourne. Surprisingly, only 16% of other metropolitans felt similarly. In contrast, 37% of rural councils said that they were very or extremely concerned.

Table 9. How concerned is your Council about the impact of the lack of Federal leadership?

Discussion: The role of local government in housing in 21st century Australia

This article set out to examine the changing role of local governments in Australia in ensuring the supply of affordable housing, and has examined how the regional context – whether a local government is located in a global city, a rural area or other metropolitan region – shapes the awareness of housing problems and the willingness to take local action. Our analysis suggests that across Australia’s local governments there is a large, and growing, awareness of housing affordability as a challenge to be addressed. Not all councils accept or acknowledge the nature and depth of this challenge, but there is sufficient engagement with this topic to indicate larger scale action is highly likely in the near future. In addition, local governments operating in Melbourne and Sydney have the greatest awareness of the impact of housing affordability problems on their communities, and may be the most willing to take action. Almost all the councils in Melbourne and Sydney were deeply concerned about housing affordability in their LGA, whereas for most councils outside of these two cities it was not viewed as a serious issue. This is perhaps captured most starkly in Table 1 which illustrates that just under half of Sydney and Melbourne councils said that housing affordability was a very substantial problem in their LGA. In contrast, not one council in the other metropolitan, regional and rural councils had a similar response. This is not surprising considering the massive difference in the median house prices of Sydney and Melbourne compared to the rest of the country.

It is clear from the data presented in this article that the geography of Australia’s housing markets has had a critical impact on local government attitudes to housing. But history has also exerted a considerable influence: many of the responses to our survey indicated an equivocal attitude to actions addressing housing affordability; this reluctance appears to reflect the legacy of dependence on state government action. A second factor is the reluctance of some governments to engage with new policy areas – such as housing – for fear of the cost implications for local governments and their communities.

The absence of affordable housing targets and the overwhelming perception that this is a federal or state government responsibility or a combination thereof suggest that councils perceive that they do not have the capacity to resolve housing affordability issues in their LGA. This incapacity is illustrated by the City of Sydney falling well short of its modest target that 7.5% of all housing in the LGA should be affordable housing by 2030. This is despite the City of Sydney being extremely well-resourced and one of the most active councils in the country on the issue of housing affordability.

The data indicate that what is required is a fundamental rethink by government of housing policy; governments need to work together – and with the for-profit and not-for-profit sectors – to find innovative solutions. The resolution of the housing affordability crisis cannot be left to the market; increasing supply will not resolve the problem. Our data and analysis suggest there is a need for substantial federal, state and local government intervention in the housing market, and this intervention needs to be undertaken at a fine geographical scale, making use of all local resources as well as national funding streams. Such action is needed to ensure that all households have the capacity to access affordable, secure and adequate housing, and there needs to be a massive bolstering of social housing. A target of 20,000 new social housing properties annually would make a dramatic impact over time. However, the focus on austerity in government programmes means that social housing programmes remain extremely modest.

Conclusion

This article has attempted to develop a fresh understanding of the role of Australian local governments in addressing housing needs. It has done so in order to better understand the potential for this – the third tier of government in Australia – to contribute to solutions to one of the nation’s ‘wicked problems’. The discussion presented here has grounded the empirical investigation within a wider analytical framework that considers the implementation of neoliberal policies, the financialisation of housing and the interplay between these two large-scale forces. In this article, we have also focussed on the experiences of local governments in Melbourne and Sydney – Australia’s two global cities – relative to other parts of the nation. We found that in the two largest cities, housing market pressures are more acute, contributing to a greater willingness of local governments to acknowledge housing as a significant societal challenge – one that calls upon local governments to seek new, innovative solutions.

Just over 40% of Australia’s population lives in Sydney or Melbourne, and the financialisation of housing has made these two cities unaffordable for low income and even moderate income families. Although not as pervasive, there are other areas that are also struggling with housing affordability. It is evident that the impacts of the financialisation of housing and neoliberal housing policy in Australia have been uneven: Sydney and Melbourne have borne the brunt of massive property speculation brought about by a combination of easy access to credit, an overly generous tax regime, and a widespread perception that investing in residential property was a guaranteed way to accumulate wealth. The failure of social housing construction to keep up with population growth has meant almost all low-income households are forced to rely on the private market for their accommodation. Housing affordability for many of these households is the central stumbling block in their endeavour to lead a decent life.

New public sector investment is needed to provide affordable housing for thousands of families in Australia, and these measures need to be accompanied by measures that address the financialisation of housing. Ideally, policy innovation would reduce the depth of the distortion currently evident while continuing to support existing homeowners and an effectively functioning housing system. Recent experience suggests housing policy reform, not radical reinvention, is needed if Australia is to fully address its housing affordability challenges. The material presented in this article suggests that local governments – working in partnership with the other tiers of government, as well as the private and not-for profit sectors – could be part of that solution. Our results suggest that there is a clear appetite among some local governments to engage in new, more effective ways with housing issues, and that this appetite is most acute in Sydney and Melbourne where the need is greatest.

Acknowledgements

The authors would like to thank Dr Violet Xia for her meticulous scrutinising of the data.

Funding

The author(s) disclosed receipt of the following financial support for the research, authorship and/or publication of this article: This research team received funding from the Australian Research Council. This article draws upon ARC Linkage Project (LP150100160 Local Government and Housing in Australia for the 21st century).

Footnotes

Declaration of conflicting interests

The author(s) declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship and/or publication of this article.

References

Aalbers, M (2016) The Financialisation of Housing: A Political Economy Approach. New York: Routledge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Aalbers, MB, Haila, A (2018) A conversation about land rent, financialisation and housing. Urban Studies 55: 18211835.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) (2012) Census of Population and Housing: Estimating Homelessness Australia 2011 (Cat. no. 2049.0). Canberra, ACT, Australia: ABS.Google Scholar
Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) (2018) Taxation Revenue, Australia, 2016–17 (Cat no. 5506.0). Canberra, ACT, Australia: ABS.Google Scholar
Australian Government (2015) Local Government National Report, Appendix F. Canberra, ACT, Australia: Department of Infrastructure and Regional Development.Google Scholar
Australian Government (2019) Foreign Investment Review Board, Annual Report, 2017–18. Canberra, ACT, Australia: Treasury.Google Scholar
Australian Local Government Association (ALGA) (2003) Productivity Commission Inquiry on First Home Ownership, October. Canberra, ACT: ALGA.Google Scholar
Badcock, B, Beer, A (2000) Home Truths: Property Ownership and Housing Wealth in Australia. Melbourne, VIC, Australia: Melbourne University Press.Google Scholar
Bagshaw, E (2017) Government restrictions bite as first home buyers shut out investors. Sydney Morning Herald, 9 November. Available at: https://www.smh.com.au/business/the-economy/government-restrictions-bite-as-first-home-buyers-shut-out-investors-20171109-gzhtcc.html (accessed 13 September 2019).Google Scholar
Beer, A, Prance, F (2012) The role of local government in reducing homelessness. FaHCSIA final report. Available at: https://core.ac.uk/download/pdf/51342748.pdf (accessed 27 September 2019).Google Scholar
Beer, A, Bentley, R, Baker, E , et al. (2016) Neoliberalism, economic restructuring and policy change: precarious housing and precarious employment in Australia. Urban Studies 53(8): 15421558.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Beer, A, Faulkner, D, Paris, C , et al. (2011) Housing Transitions through the Life Course. Bristol: Policy Press.Google Scholar
Beer, A, Kearins, B, Pieters, H (2007) Housing affordability and planning in Australia. Housing Studies 22(1): 1124.Google Scholar
Beer, A, Morris, A, Martin, J , et al. (2018) Housing locally: a report on the Local Government and Housing Linkage Project national survey. University of South Australia, 28 August. Available at: https://localgovernmentandhousingproject.files.wordpress.com/2018/08/2018-aug-28-housing-locally.pdf (accessed 13 September 2019).Google Scholar
Bentley, R, Baker, E, Mason, K (2012) Measuring the dose-dependent mental health effect of poor housing affordability for men and women. Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health 66: 761766.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bouris, M (2017) Protect yourself in a frenzied property market. Sydney Morning Herald, 31 August. Available at: https://www.smh.com.au/money/investing/protect-yourself-in-a-frenzied-property-market-20170830-gy7g31.html (accessed 13 September 2019).Google Scholar
Brown, A (2006) Federalism, regionalism and reshaping Australian governance. In: Brown, A, Bellamy, J (eds) Federalism and Regionalism in Australia: New Approaches, New Institutions? Canberra, ACT, Australia: ANU Press, pp. 1133.Google Scholar
City of Melbourne (2013) Future Living: A Discussion Paper Identifying Issues and Options for Housing Our Community. Melbourne, VIC, Australia: City of Melbourne. Available at: https://www.melbourne.vic.gov.au/SiteCollectionDocuments/future-living-discussion-paper.pdf (accessed 13 September 2019).Google Scholar
City of Sydney (2015) Housing Issues Paper. Sydney, NSW, Australia: City of Sydney. Available at: https://www.cityofsydney.nsw.gov.au/__data/assets/pdf_file/0017/251153/City-of-Sydney-Housing-Issues-Paper-April-2015.pdf (accessed 13 September 2019).Google Scholar
City of Sydney (2016) Sustainable Sydney 2030. Sydney, NSW, Australia: City of Sydney. Available at: https://www.cityofsydney.nsw.gov.au/vision/sustainable-sydney-2030 (accessed 13 September 2019).Google Scholar
City of Sydney (2017) Housing Audit June 2017. Sydney, NSW, Australia: City of Sydney. Available at: https://www.cityofsydney.nsw.gov.au/__data/assets/pdf_file/0012/289497/Research-Housing-Audit-June-2017.pdf (accessed 13 September 2019).Google Scholar
City of Sydney (2018) The City at a Glance. Sydney, NSW, Australia: City of Sydney. Available at: https://www.cityofsydney.nsw.gov.au/learn/research-and-statistics/the-city-at-a-glance (accessed 13 September 2019).Google Scholar
Clair, A, Hughes, A (2019) Housing and health: new evidence using biomarker data. Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health 73: 256262.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
CoreLogic (2016) Profile of the Australian Residential Property Investor. Sydney, NSW, Australia: CoreLogic.Google Scholar
Dawson, E, Smith, W (2018) The cost of privilege. A research paper by Per Capita for Anglicare Australia, Melbourne, March. Available at: https://percapita.org.au/wp-content/uploads/2018/05/Cost-of-Privilege-Report-7.pdf (accessed 13 September 2019).Google Scholar
Demographia (2013) 9th Annual Demographia International Housing Affordability Survey: 2013. Demographia. Available at: http://www.demographia.com/dhi2013.pdf (accessed 13 September 2019).Google Scholar
Flood, J, Baker, E (2009) Key Issues of Housing Implications of Social, Spatial and Structural Change. Melbourne, VIC, Australia: AHURI. Available at: https://www.ahuri.edu.au/research/final-reports/22 (accessed 13 September 2019).Google Scholar
Gurran, N (2003) Housing locally: positioning Australian local government housing for a new century. Urban Policy and Research 21(4): 393412.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gurran, N, Rowley, S, Milligan, V , et al. (2018) Inquiry into increasing affordable housing supply: evidence-based principles and strategies for Australian policy and practice. AHURI final report no. 300. Melbourne, VIC, Australia: Australian Housing and Urban Research Institute Limited. Available at: http://www.ahuri.edu.au/research/final-reports/300 (accessed 27 September 2019).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gurran, N, Ruming, K, Randolph, B , et al. (2008) Planning, government charges and the costs of land and housing. AHURI positioning paper no. 109. Melbourne, VIC, Australia: AHURI. Available at: https://www.ahuri.edu.au/research/position-papers/109 (accessed 13 September 2019).Google Scholar
Hayward, D (1996) The reluctant landlords? A history of public housing in Australia. Urban Policy and Research 14(1): 535.Google Scholar
House of Representatives Standing Committee on Economics, Finance and Local Government (Hawker Inquiry) (2003) Rates and Taxes: A Fair Share for Responsible Local Government. Canberra, ACT, Australia: Parliament of Australia.Google Scholar
Hulse, K, Burke, T, Ralston, L , et al. (2012) The Australian Private Rental Sector: Changes and Challenges. AHURI positioning paper, Melbourne, VIC, Australia. Available at: https://www.ahuri.edu.au/research/position-papers/149 (accessed 13 September 2019).Google Scholar
Jacobs, K (2019) Neoliberal Housing Policy: An International Perspective. New York, NY: Routledge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Janda, M (2017) Home ownership rates continue to plunge, housing stress widespread: census. ABC News, 27 June. Available at: https://www.abc.net.au/news/2017-06-27/home-ownership-rates-continue-to-plunge-census/8654534 (accessed 13 September 2019).Google Scholar
Kennedy, M (2018) The Affordable Housing Income Gap: A New Way to Measure Housing Affordability. Melbourne, VIC, Australia: Compass Housing Services.Google Scholar
Local Government Association of Queensland (LGAQ) (2014) Standing committee on economics – housing affordability inquiry. Unpublished submission.Google Scholar
Lowe, P (2017) Remarks at Reserve Bank Board dinner. Reserve Bank of Australia, Canberra, ACT, Australia, 4 April. Available at: https://www.rba.gov.au/speeches/2018/sp-gov-2018-09-04.html (accessed 27 September 2019).Google Scholar
Madden, D, Marcuse, P (2016) In Defense of Housing: The Politics of Crisis. London: Verso.Google Scholar
Moore, C (2018) Millers Point Social Housing Crisis Minute by the Lord Mayor, City of Sydney. Ref: 432. Item 36. Decision: File No: S051491. Decision published: 28 June 2018.Google Scholar
Morris, A (2016) The Australian Dream: Housing Experiences of Older Australians. Melbourne, VIC, Australia: CSIRO Publishing.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Neutze, G (1977) Urban Development in Australia. Sydney, NSW, Australia: George Allen & Unwin.Google Scholar
New South Wales (NSW) Government (2016) Budget Paper No. 5 Intergenerational Report. Sydney, NSW, Australia: NSW Government.Google Scholar
Ong, T (2017) RBA’s Philip Lowe takes aim at negative gearing, questions global race to cut corporate taxes. ABC News, 25 February. Available at: https://www.abc.net.au/news/2017-02-24/philip-lowe-house-committee-economics/8299714 (accessed 13 September 2019).Google Scholar
Paris, C (1993) Housing Australia. Melbourne, VIC, Australia: Macmillan Education Australia Pty Ltd.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Purdon, C, Burke, T (1991) Local government and housing. National Housing Strategy, No. 6. Canberra, ACT, Australia: Australian Government Publishing Service.Google Scholar
Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) (2017) Financial Stability Review 2017. Canberra, ACT, Australia: RBA.Google Scholar
Robertson, J (2017) ‘Eye-watering prices’: Australia’s housing affordability crisis laid bare. The Guardian, 3 May. Available at: https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2017/may/03/eye-watering-prices-australias-housing-affordability-crisis-laid-bare (accessed 13 September 2019).Google Scholar
Rogers, D (2018) Australia’s foreign real estate investment book looks to be over: here are five things we learned. The Conversation, 31 May. Available at: https://theconversation.com/australias-foreign-real-estate-investment-boom-looks-to-be-over-here-are-five-things-we-learned-97460 (accessed 13 September 2019).Google Scholar
Scanlon, K, Fernández Arrigoitia, M, Whitehead, C (2015) Social housing in Europe. European Policy Analysis 17: 112.Google Scholar
SGS Economics & Planning (2018) Rental Affordability Index: Key Findings. Canberra, ACT, Australia: SGS, Brotherhood of St Laurence, Community Sector Banking, National Shelter.Google Scholar
Steering Committee for the Review of Commonwealth/State Service Provision (Australia) (SCRCSSP) (2013) Report on Government Services 2013. Canberra, ACT, Australia: AusInfo.Google Scholar
Stilwell, F, Troy, P (2000) Multilevel governance and urban development in Australia. Urban Studies 37(5): 909930.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tiley, I, Hill, R (2010) Affordable housing: what role for local government? Australasian Journal of Regional Studies 16(2): 267277.Google Scholar
Watt, P (2017) Social housing and urban renewal. In: Watt, P, Smets, P (eds) Social Housing and Urban Renewal: A Cross-National Perspective. Bingley: Emerald Publishing, 137.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Watt, P, Minton, A (2016) London’s housing crisis and its activisms. Cities 20(2): 204221.Google Scholar
Wilkins, R (2017) The 12th Annual Statistical Report of the HILDA Survey. Melbourne, VIC, Australia: Melbourne Institute: Applied Economic and Social Research, University of Melbourne.Google Scholar
Wilkins, R, Lass, I (2018) The Household, Income and Labour Dynamics in Australia Survey: Selected Findings from Waves 1 to 16. Melbourne, VIC, Australia: Melbourne Institute: Applied Economic and Social Research, University of Melbourne.Google Scholar
Wood, G, Ong, R (2011) Factors shaping the dynamics of housing affordability in Australia 2001–06. Housing Studies 26(7–8): 11051127.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Yeates, C (2018) Housing investor loans slumped by 10 per cent in 2017. The Sydney Morning Herald, 9 February. Available at: https://www.smh.com.au/business/banking-and-finance/housing-investor-loans-slumped-by-10-per-cent-in-2017-20180209-p4yzu3.html (accessed 12 September 2019).Google Scholar
Figure 0

Table 1. In the view of the Council, is there a housing affordability problem in the area?

Figure 1

Table 2. What proportion of housing stock within your Council area could be considered affordable?

Figure 2

Table 3. How impactful are the barriers to local government addressing affordable housing?

Figure 3

Table 4. How concerned is your Council about the impact of high housing costs on key workers?

Figure 4

Table 5. To what extent is finding ways to provide affordable housing a priority for your Council?

Figure 5

Table 6. To what extent do elected members of Council give housing affordability attention?

Figure 6

Table 7. Is there an explicit housing affordability goal within your council?

Figure 7

Table 8. Who would your Council say is responsible for addressing housing problems in Australia?

Figure 8

Table 9. How concerned is your Council about the impact of the lack of Federal leadership?