In Australia, the Family First senator Bob Day says his family-owned
construction empire, Homestead Homes and Home Australia, which owns large
building companies in Western Australia, Queensland, Victoria and New South
Wales, would not benefit if he achieved his long-term ambition of scrapping
planning regulations. Day is also a former national president of the Housing
Industry Association.
Day has a close association with Demographia, contributing a
foreword to its latest affordability survey, and conducting media interviews to
promote the survey. Demographia favours urban expansion and produces annual
affordability surveys and which blames rising house prices on restrictive local
planning regulations. The latest survey, generated considerable media coverage
in Australia, concludes there is a growing “awareness of the economic damage
that has been inflicted by strong land use regulation” and calls for
fundamental changes although many economists argue the root causes of surging
house prices are multi-factorial – involving things such as taxes and charges,
the cost of finance, government incentives, and not just regulations around
land release.
Any good research clearly explains its assumptions, methods
and data sources. Demographia fails to do this. Although it includes a long
list of sources “consulted,” there are no details about the information
actually used so it is impossible to evaluate their methods and data accuracy. It
is important to apply accurate and comprehensive analysis when evaluating
affordability. Demographia have a political agenda. As a result, their analysis
incorporates various biases and omissions.
As one commentator writes in the Guardian “ Unaffordable
housing. Many reasons for this, the two major being speculation driving up
prices and a huge decline in public housing being constructed due to banks and
people like yourself, encouraging people to borrow heaps of money for "the
Australian dream" paying off a huge over-sized house for the rest of their
lives to have to sell it to pay for nursing home and medical treatment when
they get old, and encouraging governments to push such an agenda by propping up
housing bubbles with tax concessions and grants. Lack of land isn't one of
them. That just stops banks, developers and large builders from making huge
amounts of money flogging over-sized houses miles from amenities and transport
to people who long term won’t be able to afford them.”
Clive Palmer influences Government decision on the Mining
Tax and Carbon Tax. Bob Day influences Government decisions on planning
regulations. If Day was arguing for policies to reduce stratospheric levels of
income equality, or the means to halt the tax evading crimes of corporations,
or to address Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders horrendous disadvantage,
or to end the horrors of domestic violence, all issues that impact upon his
constituency then he may consider himself
a man of honour and worthy of support - but no – he is in it for himself. Does he actually believe he can con people
into believing that a relaxation of planning regulations wouldn't benefit him,
his family and his greedy supporters? Property developers never EVER have any
community’s interests at heart. In fact rampant development without forward
planning for infrastructure, jobs and services cause far more problems than
they solve. Planning regulations are democracy at work. Without them we would
not have paved suburban roads, water, sewage, electricity and gas supplies to
the door, public transport to new developments, green belts and nature preservation,
accessible schools and hospitals etc. Let the developers loose and we will be
back to the dirt track suburbs and back-yard dunnies [outdoor toilets]. Bob Day
is a developer motivated by the dollar, or perhaps he can point us to the
affordable housing for the socially disadvantaged he's built to convince us
otherwise. Housing profit first and foremost. .
And he also wants the minimum wage safety net to be
weakened, to boot.
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