Lisa Owen interviews Generation Rent author Shamubeel Eaqub
Lisa Owen interviews Generation Rent author
Shamubeel Eaqub Eaqub says current NZ policy is creating
“housing apartheid” and “ghettoisation” as central
city suburbs gentrify If house prices keep rising at
the current rate, mortgage repayments will be more than the
average income by 2031 “If nothing changes I see
this massive divide opening up in New Zealand between the
landed gentry and the rest and this ghettoisation of the
poor in fewer and fewer places, and in many cases they’re
going to be defined across race and ethnicity.” Calls for longer tenancy periods and better conditions
for renters so they aren’t to tackle the “poorly
regulated, unworkable” sector “Accidental
landlords” who buy rentals just as investments aren’t
doing enough to look after tenants and haven’t done a
great job providing quality housing. Wants a
designated population target. “The reality is we have
immigration and it adds to population growth, but we don’t
know to what end and to what extent. Wouldn’t it be better
if we were transparent about it and we talked about that
issue rather than always at the fringes and in the
shadows…” Questions whether so much
Council-owned land in Auckland should be devoted to golf
courses and pony clubs. “The reality is we’re not using
our land to the best advantage.” With half the
population renting, he hopes the next political party will
rise out of renter concerns, rather than “protecting the
rights of the asset owners”.
Shamubeel
Eaqub: We’re grappling with this massive change. After
home ownership rising for nearly a century, it’s been
falling for two and a half decades. And not only are we
seeing this increasing number of people renting, but it’s
also taking away any hope of participating in this Kiwi
dream, which is homeownership.
Lisa Owen:
Well, we actually have a graph, which we’ll take a look at
now, which shows that home ownership has been dropping, as
you say, down since its peak in the 1990s. How far do you
think home ownership will drop?
So house
prices have become so unaffordable that home ownership has
been falling since 1991 and is now at the lowest level since
1951. And if it keeps at current pace, we think it’s going
to fall much more. And what’s happening now is for young
people, it takes about half of their income to buy a modest
home in Auckland, and if house prices keep rising at current
rates, it’s going to be 80% of their income by 2020 and
more than their income by 2023 [sic. Eds note:
2031].
So in that case, really is it ever
going to get that bad? Would that ever happen? Because
wouldn’t demand just drop away, and the market would crash
if it ever got that bad, wouldn’t
it?
It’s quite possible that it might
happen, but in the meantime what we’re creating is
generations of people who are being priced out, and it’ll
be too late for them to get in there. And so what we’ve
created is essentially this lost generation, these cultural
orphans, these property orphans, who simply cannot get into
the housing market. So regardless of a correction in the
future, you’ve still created this underclass, this
segregation of society.
And you believe that
those people will still exist? Let’s say, even if we made
significant changes now, we would still have that group that
are locked out?
Yeah, look, I mean, it’s
taken us two and a half decades to get to where we are, so
these are long-term issues that we’re grappling with, and
any of the solutions are going to take a long time to
implement. In the meantime, we’ll see the proportion of
people, the number of people, renting continuing to rise.
So, you know, the imperative to improve the conditions are
really strong, but also we’re not expecting quick and easy
solutions.
I want to talk about some of the
solutions a bit later, but if you were right, say, in about
15 years’ time, people won’t be able to buy houses on
their own income, so how will they afford to buy a house?
Who’s going to top them up?
So what
we’re looking at now is essentially this landed gentry. If
you’ve got Mummy and Daddy who own houses, you are likely
to own houses. We’re seeing this already in Auckland,
where if you want to buy a house, you really need help from
somebody who’s been in the market for a very long time.
And we’re creating this two New Zealands. This landed
gentry, this wealth-generating heritage resource of wealth,
those people will be the ones who will be able to buy
houses, and then there is the rest. And we’re creating
this social and housing apartheid, where you’ve got these
people who are generation rent and they’re locked out of
so much of New Zealand that predicates itself on owning a
home.
So you say housing
apartheid?
Absolutely. Housing apartheid is,
I think, this concept that generation rent simply cannot
participate in so much of how New Zealand is set
up.
You’re saying that some people will be
forced out of the inner city. Those are likely to be people
who are on lower incomes, so it’s going to come down to
certain ethnic groups clustered in certain areas, you think,
isn’t it?
Yeah, and this ghettoisation is
something that’s happening already. We’re pushing poorer
people further out, away from transport, away from
amenities, and that is going to intensify as inner-city
suburbs gentrify. Where they used to house some poorer, some
less affluent people, they’re getting pushed out, and
this—
But hasn’t that always been the
case, though? Hasn’t it always been that people move
further out to afford the house that they can
afford?
Yeah, that’s absolutely true, but
it’s happening even more so. And what we’re seeing is
this concentration of poor people in just a few places, and
what we’re creating is this kind of gated communities of
wealthy homeowners and then the rest.
But
people sitting at home watching this who own their own
homes, they’re sitting in their own home, they will say,
‘I’m not the gentry.’ That’s a very loaded term, I
suppose. And they’ll say, ‘I’m going to help my kids
into a house. What’s wrong with
that?’
There’s nothing wrong with that
for that half of New Zealanders who live in their own homes.
For the other half, it means that they’ll never own their
own home, and what we’ll see is this growing wedge between
the two groups of people. And that describes a New Zealand
to me where your chance of success in life depends on
whether your parents own their own home or not, rather than
whether you have talent and whether you apply yourself. Now,
that can’t be the New Zealand that we aim for. That
can’t be the New Zealand that’s us, because that
egalitarian story, that fair go, that equal opportunity
story for New Zealand, which is so strong in our fabric, we
are going to sacrifice that.
Well, so what’s
caused it? How have we ended up here?
Well,
we’ve made mistakes over the last two and a half decades.
That’s what has happened. So we’ve got banking policies
that favour lending to mortgages and to investment. We have
favoured tax policies that have not been very well
implemented in terms of the housing side of things. But
fundamentally what’s really broken is we haven’t done
well enough in terms of land supply; we haven’t done well
enough in terms of infrastructure and in terms of building a
construction sector that’s capable of dealing with changes
in demand.
So if you had to name, say, the top
two things that you think would— the changes that would
make sure this doesn’t continue, what would they
be?
Well, the first one is actually not
about fixing this problem but a palliative
care.
Mm.
It’s about making
conditions better for renters. So right now, renting is
essentially a second option and a much worse option than
owning. And if I look to places like Germany, where they
have much higher tenure and all of those kinds of things,
renting is a very comparable option to owning, and we could
mimic that in New Zealand by having better rules around
tenancy agreements and dispute resolution. So we would like
to see that as a palliative option for those half of New
Zealanders who are already renting to make it much easier
for them. And in the meantime, we should continue the work
around how do we increase supply of housing, how do we build
the infrastructure that’s necessary but also tighten up
the rules around taxes and tighten up the rules around our
banking sector, which is pushing more and more money into
mortgages, rather than entrepreneurship, which creates
long-term prosperity for New
Zealand.
There’s a lot of things in there,
so let’s unpack some of them. In respect of the people who
are renting, you think that they should have longer lease
options, don’t you? What would be the right amount of time
as a minimum for a lease?
Yeah, so in a
place like Germany, it’s unlimited, and I think that’s
too big a leap for us, coming from a very periodic kind of
rental structure. And what we suggested is something like,
say, let’s put in three-year as a norm and people can
still change it to suit their circumstances, but also make
the reasons for why you can get rid of your tenants or your
landlord to move, make those much tighter in terms of the
reasons, but also to put responsibilities on the tenant –
put the house back the way you found it. And unless we find
the right balance between the landlord and the tenant,
we’re not going to find a much better tenancy and rental
solution for New Zealand.
But isn’t the
problem, as you point out, that a lot of the people who own
those rentals are mum-and-dad couples, people managing those
rentals, and it’s just too hard for
them?
It is, and we’ve got this huge
number of accidental landlords, I guess. They’re not
really in it to look after the tenant. It’s not really
their business. They’ve bought the house as an investment,
and the tenants are kind of a by-product of it. And what
we’re saying is that that cannot be the case. When half of
your population is living in rented proportion, how can it
be that we have this amateur, poorly regulated, unworkable
kind of sector? Surely, it must be that we try and give
rights and responsibilities that mimic some of the benefits
of ownership, because we’re not talking about the minority
anymore; it’s the majority of New
Zealanders.
But the whole issue with housing,
isn’t it, that it is a political hot potato, because why
would people vote for or choose changes that are going to
take wealth away from them? Because that’s in essence what
you’re asking.
Well, absolutely, and I
think that’s the biggest difficulty. The vested interests
are incredibly powerful, and they are going to fight tooth
and nail to stop any of this stuff from happening. And yet I
think it’s time that generation rent got together and
rose, because their voice is powerful. Over half of voting
age people are in rental properties, but 57% of voting age
people in Auckland are in rental properties. They need to
demand these changes.
So are you picking that,
what, the next political party will rise out of this group
or be aimed at this group?
Well, I certainly
hope so, because this is the majority of New Zealanders now,
and their needs are not being met. And certainly there is
very little representation for some of these issues that are
very powerful and affecting the quality of our lives, and to
say that we are going to keep banging on about protecting
the rights of the asset owners, who haven’t done a great
job in terms of providing quality of housing, about
professional management and all of those kinds of things, I
think is very weak.
People at home will be
really interested in when you think that house prices should
or will take a hit. You say it’s cyclical in your book.
You say it’s about a six-year cycle, and we’re four
years in. So when can they expect things to start diving
downwards?
The more that house prices rise,
the bigger the risk of a downturn. But regardless of what
happens to house prices, I think the underlying policies
that are broken need to be fixed. You know, we sort of look
to the Reserve Bank or to the government to say that we
should try and solve this, but as we have seen over the last
couple of decades, they have no control.
You
talk about policy, but the Government says, ‘It’s all a
supply side problem. All we need to do is build more
houses.’ But you also think that immigration needs to be
looked at more closely, don’t you?
Of
course. You know, a lot of the cyclicality and volatility in
demand absolutely comes from immigration, because two years
ago we were wringing our hands that we’re losing so many
people from New Zealand, and now we’re saying we have too
many people coming to New Zealand. And the thing is we
don’t talk about immigration in a fulsome way in New
Zealand. It’s weird, because it’s in the very fabric of
who we are and yet we don’t know why we have immigration;
we just have it. So I would like to see a much more, I
guess, articulated approach to immigration in terms of why
are we having immigration in New Zealand? What’s the
target in terms of population, and how do we manage
that?
So you would like a plan that tells
people exactly how many people we want in this country? That
might not be a popular view because, again, this is a topic
that people don’t like to talk
about.
Yeah, and I think quite often it gets
tinged with racism and you’re accused of being racist if
you talk about immigration in that way, but the reality is
we have immigration and it adds to population growth, but we
don’t know to what end and to what extent. Wouldn’t it
be better if we were transparent about it and we talked
about that issue, rather than always at the, kind of,
fringes and in the shadows? That makes it very much— you
know, the thing about the comments at the bottom of your
online articles.
But if we don’t have the
houses for these people, do we then just have to say,
‘Well, we draw a line. We’re not letting anyone else
in’?
Well, I think the issue with the
immigration thing is it’s only a cyclical issue. It goes
up, and then it goes down, and to say that we will never
build enough houses for this increase in population is not
correct. Instead what we’re saying is that in short bursts
we might not be able to meet that demand, so we’re really
talking about responsiveness in terms of our land supply and
all of that. But it could be that when we have sudden surges
in migration that we limit our quotas for residence visas or
for work visas, whatever it might be, knowing full well that
it will have a cost on a place like Auckland. You know,
where do we get our talent from? More often than not, it’s
from migrants.
You talked about land supply
there, and in your book, you address councils and the fact
that they have significant land assets. And, in fact, one in
particular that you raise is golf courses. Tell me what you
think should happen there? Auckland is the example you
use.
That’s right, and in Auckland, the
council owns something like 13 golf courses. And we have to
ask some very hard questions on what is the value of that
land, and is it being put to the best use? It doesn’t mean
we need to raze the whole thing and build all over it, but
if we put housing in it, around it, through it, it might be
that we’re able to use our land much better. Now, I
personally don’t play golf, but I’m sure the golfers
will be up in arms right now, saying, ‘Stop that from
happening,’ and the reality is we’re not using our land
to the best advantage in having open green spaces for pony
clubs and for golf courses. It’s
stupid.
Before we go, you were talking about
racial segregation, and I just want to be clear on it. If we
continue on the way that we are, do you believe that this
country will end up racially segregated on the basis of who
can afford houses and who
can’t?
Absolutely. If nothing changes, I
see this massive divide opening up in New Zealand between
the landed gentry and the rest, and there’s ghettoisation
of the poor in fewer and fewer places, and in many cases,
they’re going to be defined across race and
ethnicity.
Can we stop
it?
Absolutely. Absolutely we can stop it,
and we should, and we must. And the ideas that we’ve
presented in the book are all about the solutions that are
in front of us. What it requires is political courage,
leadership and conviction to be able to make it
happen.
Shamubeel Eaqub, thanks for joining us
this morning with Generation Rent, an interesting read.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Transcript provided
by Able. www.able.co.nz
ENDS