Labour Government Still Unwilling to Address Housing Crisis
New Report: Labour Government Still Unwilling to Address Housing Crisis
According to a report released today
by Economic and Social Research Aotearoa (ESRA), the reset
to the Labour-led government’s flagship Kiwibuild policy
may worsen the housing crisis for low and middle income
earners.
Vanessa Cole, a housing researcher based
at the University of Auckland, states that rather than
focusing on home ownership, any policy to address the
housing crisis must involve a mass build of public housing,
security of tenure for those in public housing, and looser
restrictions on who can access this housing.
‘An
ambitious policy like this would protect renters from
private landlords, make market house prices more affordable,
save public land from privatisation and create a continuous
funding stream for building additional housing stock,’
Cole said.
‘Kiwibuild as it stands relies on
market-based solutions that have been proven not to work,’
Cole continued, ‘and involves the privatisation of public
land and the gentrification and pricing out of low-income
renters from their communities.’
This ESRA report
adds to a growing body of research calling for the
government to refocus from private home ownership to the
provision of public housing.
‘Massive increases
to public housing stock have been called for by the Welfare
Expert Advisory Group, economist Shamubeel Eaqub, and even
Treasury. This is a popular policy that, in tandem with
Māori-led papakāinga developments, would go a long way
towards seriously addressing the housing crisis in New
Zealand. All that would be required from Labour is some
political will.’
The report is available in full
at https://esra.nz/kiwibuild-always-public-housing/
ENDS