First National blames bureaucracy for GDP fall
for public release
16 June 2017
First National
blames bureaucracy and short sightedness for GDP
fall
First National Real Estate Chief Executive, Bob
Brereton, says it is ‘insane’ that national GDP has
fallen at a time when activity in the building sector should
be at record highs and asserts that bureaucracy and
short-sighted policy planning are to blame.
New
figures, released yesterday, show that the New Zealand
economy expanded by half a per cent in the three months to
March – however this figure was below forecasts and was
actually a decrease of 0.1 percent when measured on a per
capita basis across the whole population. Statistics New
Zealand says that this was primarily the result of much
lower building activity and noted that construction fell 2
.1 per cent, with all building sectors showing a
fall.
However, Mr Brereton questions how this could be
the case.
“The latest GDP figures are down at a time
when growth should be booming on the back of massive
building demand. We have a huge undersupply of residential
properties in Auckland, the apparent wind-up of large scale
green field and brown field developments in Auckland and a
large-scale expansion of development throughout the Bay of
Plenty. So how can GDP be down”?
Mr Brereton blames
the ‘usual suspects’ of consenting, finance and labour
for the drop.
He said he was pleased to see that
quicker consenting was a key recommendation of the Mayoral
Report on Housing but believed that action had to be taken
now to get this issue resolved.
“The consenting
process is still taking way too long making it much more
difficult to get a project to completion - as highlighted by
the 9 year wait for approval for a development in Three
Kings, finally approved earlier this week. While that
example might be at the extremes – most projects are
experiencing significant displays and it’s simply no
longer acceptable”.
Mr Brereton also highlighted
finance and credit restrictions as another leading obstacle
to building growth.
“The difficulty in obtaining
credit for small to medium size developments is a real
obstacle to ramping up activity. We have a building sector
that wants to get on with it and a Reserve Bank that seems
intent on killing growth at any cost”.
Mr Brereton
said that the third barrier to building growth was a
shortage of labour.
“It simply isn’t there.
Builders are pricing jobs at a level that ensures that they
don’t get them because they have work lined up, in some
cases, for years in advance. We need more qualified
builders, urgently – but the issue needs cross party and
local government support, not just by the politicians but by
the bureaucrats that manage the systems”.
Mr
Brereton said that he doesn’t believe that the current
lull in Auckland house prices can be sustained while these
three obstacles continue.
“High demand and low
supply equals price increases. We can strangle demand, for a
while, with tightening fiscal policy but ultimately we’ll
just exacerbate the supply issue and make the problem even
worse. Less interference would let the market find its own
equilibrium”.
ends