Housing Affordability: Fletchers Confirm Land Availability Is Biggest Constraint
Press Release By ACT Leader John Banks
Thursday, January 30 2013
New Zealand’s biggest building company, Fletcher Building, yesterday confirmed ACT’s view on housing unaffordability –
it’s lack of land that is the biggest driver behind our increasing house prices, ACT Leader John Banks said today.
When questioned on TVNZ’s One News last night, a Fletcher Challenge representative confirmed they could “build
significantly more” [houses] but their “biggest constraint is land availability.”
“ACT has said this from the start - no new land means no new houses, and the land that is available is too costly for
first home owners,” Mr Banks said.
“Both the 2025 Taskforce, in its 2009 report, and the Productivity Commission report of 2012 reach this conclusion.
“Labour and the Greens both claim they can provide affordable homes, yet their policies fail to address the problem of
land supply.
“Rather than making houses more affordable for many, they would rather take money off all New Zealanders to subsidise
houses for a few. This will not solve the problem.
“The only credible way to address housing unaffordability is to increase the supply of land. This can only happen if we
significantly reform the RMA. It’s the RMA that gives local councils their power to restrict land for residential houses
and to drown building projects in resource and building consents, and other red tape.
“Better yet, reforming the RMA will not require the Government to fork out billions of taxpayers’ dollars to build
houses for a few. Instead it would increase land supply, decrease land prices and therefore increase the private sectors
ability to build more homes for less.
“ACT is committed to RMA reform and we will be pushing National to take bold steps in the RMA reform programme that is
currently under consideration by Ministers,” Mr Banks said.
ENDS
To watch the bulletin on TVNZ's One News click here: http://tvnz.co.nz/national-news/fletcher-building-wades-into-housing-debate-video-5329947