Mana’s policy on affordable housing
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Minto for Mayor
Mana’s policy on affordable housing
As part of the Ikaroa-Rawhiti byelection Mana candidate Te Hamua Nikora announced on 20 June Mana’s updated housing policy which included:
1. 10,000 state
houses built each year until we have housed everyone who
needs a home.
(Note that contrary to some suggestions
these houses will be allocated on need)
2. Bringing back
and extending the former Maori Affairs Housing Loan Scheme
which involved low deposit and low interest rate loans to
build houses on Maori land. It is intended to update this
scheme to allow for building on local authority and Crown
land.
Today’s Mana announcement is to extend our housing policy to all New Zealanders and in the context of the Mayoral campaign to look particularly at what Minto for Mayor would do for the people of Auckland where a housing affordability crisis is in full swing.
Firstly Mana recognizes that the current housing market is skewed dramatically in favour of property investors rather than first-home buyers. Property investors can deduct the interest on the mortgage, their insurance and home maintenance from their income before they pay tax. First home buyers can’t. First home buyers pay tax on every dollar they earn and every dollar they spend and can’t deduct interest, insurance or maintenance before paying tax.
Just how dramatically the market is skewed towards property investors is this full page advertisement from the Singapore Straits Times newspaper of 1 June 2013 encouraging people to come to New Zealand and invest in property.
The advertisement highlights –
• Great
rates of return on residential and commercial property (and
five nights free accommodation in New Zealand for the first
10 coming to see!)
• And most significantly NO STAMP
DUTIES and NO CAPITAL GAINS TAX are listed as
benefits.
Similar articles have appeared in Australian papers indicating the same thing.
Again this highlights that housing policy in New Zealand is set up for property investors rather than first-home buyers.
What Mana would do is transfer the favourable bias from property investors to first home buyers by imposing a tough capital gains tax on investors which would help fund a home ownership scheme for first home buyers.
In other words we will use part of the income from a capital gains tax to support low-interest loans for first-home buyers.
So our major national housing policy announcement today is to reintroduce Home Ownership accounts which were operated by the former Post Office Savings Bank whereby low interest loans were extended to first-home buyers who had demonstrated a savings history indicating they could service a mortgage. I myself bought my first home using such an account in 1986. Times have changed since then but not the need for families to have affordable homes and the opportunity to own their own home. This policy would be run through Kiwibank.
What about Auckland specifically?
This city is in the grip of
catastrophic market failure which has left Aucklanders with
–
• Developers building houses only for upper-income
earners
• High rents for poor quality
accommodation
• A drastic shortage of affordable rental
accommodation
• Land speculators ripping us
off
• Housing policies for property investors rather
than first-home buyers
And in the middle of this crisis we have the government and Auckland Mayor Len Brown signing a heads of agreement on 24 July last year for the removal of affordable state homes from Glen Innes. These are to be replaced with seaside mansions for the wealthy and high-rise slums for families on low incomes. Len Brown supports the destruction of GI, Point England and Panmure. He is standing with the 1%. He wants those suburbs for the rich while the poor are out of sight of the sea and out of mind.
It’s one of Len’s most shameful actions as mayor. He’s a rollover – he signs his name wherever the corporate sector tells him.
In contrast to policies for the 1% Minto for Mayor’s housing policies for Auckland will:
(a) Have the building of 20,000 affordable
council rental homes underway in the next term of
council.
(b) Require property
speculators and property developers to pay the increase in
value on land when council zoning changes inflate the land
value. (“betterment” charges) This will provide hundreds
of millions to be invested in additional affordable, high
quality council rental
properties
(c) Establish a “Charter of
Rights” for Aucklanders in rental
accommodation
(d) Pressure the
government to allow Auckland City to impose rent controls
till Auckland’s housing affordability crisis is over
(e) Require all new developments of
more than 10 homes to have a minimum of 50% of affordable
homes
So looking at these in more details:
(a) Have the building of 20,000 affordable council rental homes underway in the next term of council.
What would this look
like?
Auckland Council owns 300 hectares of land
which is currently being assessed for housing suitability.
If all this land could be built on then the building of up
to 9000 affordable Council rental homes would be possible
without the need to purchase land. Other land would be
acquired as needed. These 20,000 homes would be built by
the council utilizing cheaper rates for borrowing, cheaper
building supplies through bulk-buying arrangements and
reduced compliance costs. These homes would set the standard
for affordable living in Auckland.
How much would
it cost?
A stand-alone council housing unit will
be established with approx. $200 million in seeding funding
and with further income provided by “betterment levies”
from property speculators (see later) Income from these
rentals will be reinvested in building additional affordable
rental homes. As part of this policy the council will be
prepared to work with community not-for-profit groups and
innovative projects such as “earthship homes” where such
groups have demonstrable community support and can provide
high quality, affordable outcomes for
families.
Why don’t we just leave it to the
private sector?
The private sector has failed to
provide what Aucklanders need. They have built no affordable
homes in the city for the past decade because developers
make bigger profits building large houses ($500,000 up)
which are well out of reach of most families wanting to rent
or buy. The new 39,000 homes in three years promised by the
government and Len Brown will be unaffordable for most
Aucklanders.
What are the
benefits?
Auckland City is already 30,000 houses
short for its existing population. This programme will
directly address this need as well as having the flow-on
effect of bringing down rents across the city as the supply
of affordable rental properties increases.
(b) Require property speculators and property developers to pay the increase in value on land when council zoning changes inflate the land value
What would this look
like?
Currently property speculators and
developers buy land on Auckland’s rural outskirts and
within the Auckland urban area and “land-bank” it while
waiting for the value to increase through council zoning
changes. This policy would mean that any increase in the
value of the land through changes to council zoning would be
charged to the developer as a “betterment fee” when the
land is developed.
For example: A 29 ha block at 39 Flat
Bush Road was bought in 1995 for $890,000 and is now on sale
for $112.6 million with the value increase attributable to
the change in council zoning from rural to residential. As
things stand this is an unearned, untaxed income for a land
speculator.
Note: Before 1953 such betterment fees were
charged regularly at 50% of the increased land value and
were pivotal to housing development. They were used for
example to develop almost the entire Hutt Valley in the
decade following the Second World War. They can do the same
thing for the housing crisis facing Auckland now. Charges on
land speculators like this are commonplace overseas where
the “value uplift” is at least shared between the
speculator and the community.
How much would it
cost?
Nothing - it would bring in additional
revenue to council.
Why not leave the profit to
the speculator?
The speculator or developer has
done literally nothing to justify receiving the unearned
income which accrues as a result of a council decision to
rezone land. Auckland Council ratepayers should benefit
rather than speculators or developers.
What are
the benefits?
This would collect hundreds of
millions of additional funding each year for further council
investment in affordable housing.
(c) Establish a “Charter of Rights” for Aucklanders in rental accommodation
What would this look
like?
This would be drawn up in consultation
with tenants and would cover issues such as tenure, rent and
“warrant of fitness” standards. For example Auckland
Council could draw up WOF criteria and rate rental
properties A to F (as the council does for commercial food
outlets such as cafes) and publish the results on-line with
listed improvements required as appropriate.
How
much would it cost?
No extra cost – to be
accommodated within current council work
priorities.
Why not leave the market to
itself?
Families are at the mercy of “the
market” because of the dire shortage of affordable rental
housing. The market loads costs onto low-income families
whose income is constrained not by the value of their
contribution to society but by having their work valued by
“the market”. And the situation for families who rent is
becoming more desperate as the government evicts families
from state houses.
What are the
benefits?
Encouraging better housing for
families and lower rents where these are desperately
needed.
(d) Pressure the government to allow Auckland City to impose rent controls till Auckland’s housing affordability crisis is over.
What would this look
like?
Rents in Auckland are too high with
families across all parts of the city paying more than 30%
of their income in rent. These high rents are caused by a
chronic shortage of affordable rental housing across all
parts of Auckland. This policy would require the council to
set a rentals policy and allow tenants to request a council
evaluation of the rent they are being charged. The council
would have the ability to set the rent if it is outside the
council’s rental policy guideline. This policy could
reduce rents in Auckland by up to 30%.
How much
would it cost?
No additional
cost.
What are the benefits?
This
would allow tenants to receive an independent evaluation of
the rent they pay and have it fixed in cases where it is too
high. This would also drive many “property investors”
out of the housing market which in turn would lower rents
and the price of houses themselves. Note that close to half
all the houses sold in Auckland are bought by property
investors rather than first home
buyers.
(e) Require all new developments of more than 10 homes to have a minimum of 50% of affordable homes
What would this look
like?
Requirements like this are a typical
feature of countries overseas where affordable housing is an
issue.
How much would it cost?
No
additional cost.
Why not leave it to market
forces to decide the affordability of
property?
The market is the problem. It has
produced no affordable houses in Auckland for at least the
past decade.
What are the
benefits?
Self
evident.
ENDS