Some Home Truths For The Next Government
'Transformative
Housing Policy for Aotearoa New Zealand', written by Dr
Jenny McArthur (University College London), Max Harris,
author of The New Zealand Project, Dr Jacqueline Paul
(Unitec), Scott Figenshow (Community Housing Aotearoa) and
University of Auckland sociology PhD candidate Jordan King,
recommends a bold shift from housing “as a form of
commodified intergenerational wealth creation to a form of
wellbeing creation”. “The housing crisis is
neither inevitable or escapable,” says Jordan King, “and
allowing it to continue unabated will do lasting damage to
health, exacerbate inequality and levels of debt and shatter
the hopes of a generation.” The paper says the
current situation can be attributed to a number of key
factors: 19th century colonisers’ land grabbing that left
only five percent of Māori land remaining under Māori
custodianship; the imposition of Pākeha ideas about land
and resource ownership on Māori; a major shift away from
the state taking responsibility for providing housing (under
both Labour and National governments from 1984-1999); the
radical deregulation of the financial and banking sectors in
the 1990s, and the centrality of real estate to the New
Zealand economy.
The “deep-seated deference” to
the market and the failure of multiple governments to tax
wealth have compounded these issues. The paper’s
solutions include establishing a Ministry of Public Works, a
Green Investment Bank, a state lending agency, stronger
support for Tino Rangatiratanga over housing policy, fair
taxation and expanding state and community
housing. Tackling homelessness, particularly
targeting youth, and looking at ways to redress the power
imbalance between landlords and renters complete the
recommendations. Mr King says many of these ideas are
already working effectively in other parts of the
world. “These are practical policies that have
emerged out of the tireless advocacy of housing campaigners
in New Zealand, and ideas that have proven to be effective
elsewhere.” All policies broadly advocate for
transferring power away from banks, unelected officials and
the market with their focus on intergenerational wealth
creation for the few, to a more collective approach which
puts Māori at its centre. “A properly coordinated
housing system – integrated with the rest of the
country’s public policy – will be embedded in tikanga,
prioritise kāinga and whanau and focus on
‘decolonising’ existing housing policies,” he
says. Taken together, the paper’s authors believe
this new approach will contribute to a markedly more
democratic and innovative housing policy that won’t
involve ‘tinkering around the edges’ of the existing
system. “We argue that there is no excuse for
political parties to be timid or inactive any longer; the
challenges are too great to be neglected, and a bold new
approach is needed for the greater wellbeing of us
all.” Read
the full
report A
country where houses are unaffordable, renters are
struggling and there is widespread homelessness is not a
situation any government should
tolerate. This is according to a
recent paper from the Public Policy Institute at the
University of Auckland, which says New Zealand needs a
complete paradigm shift to “reimagine” what a fair
housing system might look like.