Monday, December 17, 2018

Big numbers and good intentions: Labor's Affordable Housing Plan

The Federal ALP conference is happening in Adelaide at the moment, and one of the big early announcements was a plan to build a lot of 'affordable' housing. This can probably be treated as the first big housing announcement of the coming election campaign. Check it out here.


It has been met with near-rapturous support from community housing providers and their supporters, like the Everybody's Home campaign. Others, like ACOSS have been more circumspect. And some on twitter have raised some concerns. Let's dig in to what the policy is, and what we might expect to deliver.,

At its heart, this would be a reboot of the National Rental Affordability Scheme launched in 2008 by the then ALP government. Originally intended to create 50,000 'affordable housing' dwellings, the program was ended in 2014 with less than 40,000 properties either delivered or approved. The first dwellings built are coming to the end of their 10 year commitment this month, making this announcement from Labour timely. This NRAS 2.0 follows a similar model, scaled up to creating 250,000 'affordable housing' dwellings, though with some notable exceptions.

NRAS 'NRAS 2.0' proposal
Open to individuals and corporations Only open to corporations
Must be managed by an 'approved participant' - can be for profit or not-for-profit Must be managed by a 'registered community housing provider' - most, but not all, are NFP
Leased to people on low to moderate incomes, at 80% or less of market rent Leased to people on low to moderate incomes, at 80% or less of market rent
No restriction on resident's immigration status Not open to "international students, foreign workers and other non-residents"
Scheme length: 10 years per dwelling. Scheme length: 15 years per dwelling.
Subsidy in 2018/19 dollars - $8335.75 pa from federal government, and $2,778.58 pa from state governments. Subsidy in 2018/19 dollars - $8,500 pa from federal government. No detail on whether state governments will also contribute.
TOTAL $111,921.30* TOTAL $127,500 (plus any state contribution)

*It is open to the investor to exit the scheme at any time without penalty (apart from no longer being paid the subsidy) and we are aware of some instances where they did, or where the property stopped being eligible for the subsidy. It is unclear whether the proposal will operate similarly.


While a commitment to addressing housing issues is welcome, this is a limited model in a number of ways. There may be good reason to doubt whether it will deliver the 250,000 dwellings promised, and whether 80% of market rent is any kind of good way to ensure the dwellings are actually affordable.

The subsidy is very generous - anywhere on market rent of $815 or less receives more in subsidy than they give up in discount. At lower rents (anything below $407) the owner receives more than double the discount.

By closing access to private investors Labor are clearly hoping for more 'institutional investors'. This does not mean not-for-profit housing necessarily, nor necessarily better-behaved landlords. Just under half of the current NRAS properties are managed by for-profit providers.

There are a few obvious paths to funding. The federal National Housing Finance and Investment Corporation acting as a bond aggregator might lend to community housing providers for them to build and operate "NRAS 2" properties directly. The subsidy from this proposal would make the financial viability of those loans much easier to meet.

Inclusionary zoning models of the type able to be required under planning mechanisms like SEPP70 are also likely to utilise the proposal. Property developers in areas using inclusionary zoning rules will need to set aside some housing in large developments for affordable housing, and this payment will in many cases more than repay the lost revenue from that requirement. That's not an excellent result, as it is merely cost-shifting from the private sector to the public sector.

It is also very likely to form part of for-profit build-to-rent models because it will make those development propositions much more attractive.

There is a big question mark then over how many properties will actually be built. Labor promises to deliver 250,000 dwellings, but they aren't building them - the private sector is building. Labor has flagged the return of the National Housing Supply Council - a very welcome move - to help make sure properties are delivered in areas of need. But limiting properties to particular areas, and particular investors, means it is less likely that a match will occur and the right investor will be able to build in the right location. Will this limit how many properties actually get built?

What else can Labor do? Frankly it is an indictment of Australia's housing policy environment that they don't seem to be considering a large public housing build. Recent AHURI research demonstrated how much more sensible a publicly run housing program is, being by far the most cost-effective approach. And after development costs, directly running public housing is already cheaper than the rent. So why pursue such costly approaches?

In large part, it is because of a collective decision for an ongoing, bipartisan and cross-sectoral approach to housing which restricts access to social housing and casts its provision as welfare or even charity. While it is perhaps most enthusiastically pursued by conservative politicians, it is perpetuated by many in the not-for-profit housing sectors from advocacy to academia. One of the key ways this happens is by distinguishing 'affordable' housing from 'social' housing mostly along income lines. Because 'affordable' housing is only to be delivered by non-government organisations, this means that the non-government part of social housing can be subsidised by higher rents collected in affordable housing, but the government part cannot.

Consider that if instead social housing eligibility was opened back up to moderate incomes the cost to both construct and maintain would become much easier to manage. This is far better for all residents. The need for a complicated model such as 'affordable' housing would disappear, as would the stigma attached to social, and particularly public, housing. This is not an easy shift, as it would be important to ensure those on the lowest incomes aren't jettisoned, but with commitment it could happen.

Public housing has many advantages over the private market - it can be built where it is needed, without having to wait for the private sector to determine market conditions are favourable. It can be built in the type most suited - both dwelling structure and size - to the local conditions, rather than to what works out best for an investment manager. It has disadvantages too - shared with other social housing providers - of being a large bureaucracy that can struggle to respond to individual needs and often has nothing to offer tenants in being part of decision-making processes.

What is needed is a real conversation about the ways in which Australia can be housed, and a real vision for our housing system. Who can deliver that?

2 comments:

  1. Thank You TU for the Public Housing component in your report.
    I still feel that their needs to be a detailed explanation in layman's terms on the difference between Affordable Housing and Public Housing!
    I have been to many forums and organisers seem to have trouble explaining the differences?
    Affordable means you can afford something if you have the means if it is unaffordable then you don't have the means, eg; rents based on the postcode rather then the persons income!
    Being a tenant and avid advocate for Public Housing you, as well as I know that this system of housing is workable as history has proven we need to retain what Public Housing we have, maintain it before some government dictates that it has outlived it's use due to their ignorance of repair requests eg; Millers Point where properties had stood in good stead for over 100 years?
    We need to build considerably more Public Housing not only for our vulnerable and not to create ghettos but for diversity eg; rent system that works where tenants that meet the criteria pay 25% of household income.
    I also advocate that all Public Housing whether existing or built in the future should be legislated that it be held in 'perpetuity' to stop greedy elected governments from selling off public assets thereby destroying thriving and productive communities!

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  2. Thank you for your post NSW TU,

    Based on demographic and financial modelling in our AHURI report we argue that the best way to fund and finance social housing is via a combination of up front capital investment (land, grants) and most efficient forms of financing. Our calculations show that 15 years of NRAS2 to a private landlord gets you 15 years of below-market housing, but the same amount of subsidy as a capital spend (or even drip fed into CHPs) gets you permanent social housing.

    Since 1996 there has been no dedicated national capital investment program for social housing. This has led to more expensive market based 'affordable' rental projects by CHOs reliant on commercial financing and opportunistic parcels of land, where tenants are matched to required rents to make schemes financially feasible, rather the other way around - responding to local need. The pace and scale of these small often infill developments, while of often attractive, bear no resemblance to the level of response required or past construction levels of public housing. They are also less affordable.

    It had been widely anticipated that Labor would provide an answer to this funding gap to address the evident and manifest need for social housing. However Labor has only proposed to pay an operating subsidy to investors over 15 years in return for rents from new dwellings to be set at 20% below market rate. This will produce around 6,660 20% below market rent dwellings each year of its first term in office. This is well below the average construction rate of public housing between 1945 and 1996, which was 9,000 (and much more in the 1980s).
    Furthermore, market based rents for new dwellings will not be affordable to any of the 433, 000 low income households currently in housing stress and in need of social housing, particularly in city housing markets where opportunities exist. Despite good intentions, NRAS 2 dwellings will just be too expensive and unaffordable for low income households.

    To address housing stress and the needs of the most vulnerable referred to in its speeches, Doug Cameron, Tanya Plibersek and Bill Shorten will need to re-orientate the ALPs policy proposal to invest much more directly in social housing.

    Our reaction, based on our AHURI research, to Labor's proposal can be found here: https://theconversation.com/labors-housing-pledge-is-welcome-but-direct-investment-in-social-housing-would-improve-it-108909
    Further our short article on the need for social housing and how to fund it can be found here:
    https://theconversation.com/australia-needs-to-triple-its-social-housing-by-2036-this-is-the-best-way-to-do-it-105960

    By the way the NZ government is proposing to legislate to protect public housing from unsocial private redevelopment (such as intensive densification for private dwellings and dispersal of social tenancies) and will also remove public housing's requirement to pay a dividend to the Treasury. Further afield, the Dutch are negotiating a fair rent agreement to control excessive rent increases. Even in the May's UK, governments are being encouraged to raise bonds for social housing and inclusionary planning incentives have provided land for 40 percent of social housing developments. Paris goes even further in requiring 30% of housing in urban areas be social housing and fines are imposed on non-conforming cities and counties. These international illustrations suggest that Australia is just way too conservative in this space.

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