Close Menu
  • US
  • World
    • Canada
    • Europe
    • Asia
    • Africa
    • Australia
    • South America
  • Politics
  • Business
    • Finance
    • Investing
    • Markets
    • Economy
    • Small Business
    • Crypto
  • Money
  • Lifestyle
  • Sports
  • Videos
  • Topics
    • Entertainment
    • Health
    • Tech
    • Travel
  • More Articles
Trending Now
Polish Deputy PM meets Ukraine’s Kyrylo Budanov amid UPA scandal

Polish Deputy PM meets Ukraine’s Kyrylo Budanov amid UPA scandal

June 6, 2026

Stéphane Dion says Canada needs more diplomats to build ties with Europe

June 6, 2026
How to watch the Socceroos at South Bank

How to watch the Socceroos at South Bank

June 6, 2026
‘Off Campus’ Star Mika Abdalla and Jake Short Break Silence on Resurfaced Podcast Clip After Split (Exclusive)

‘Off Campus’ Star Mika Abdalla and Jake Short Break Silence on Resurfaced Podcast Clip After Split (Exclusive)

June 6, 2026
Delaney Hall snack purchases cast doubt on hunger strike reports, DHS says

Delaney Hall snack purchases cast doubt on hunger strike reports, DHS says

June 6, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Just In
  • Polish Deputy PM meets Ukraine’s Kyrylo Budanov amid UPA scandal
  • Stéphane Dion says Canada needs more diplomats to build ties with Europe
  • How to watch the Socceroos at South Bank
  • ‘Off Campus’ Star Mika Abdalla and Jake Short Break Silence on Resurfaced Podcast Clip After Split (Exclusive)
  • Delaney Hall snack purchases cast doubt on hunger strike reports, DHS says
  • Could Noah’s Ark remains be buried in Turkey? New findings revive age-old debate
  • Victor Wembanyama admits to harsh truths after costly mistake at end of NBA Finals game
  • Can’t wait for the Lucas Museum to open? Visit this little-known SoCal gem – that’s free to the public
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact
Pure Info NewsPure Info News
Newsletter
  • US
  • World
    • Canada
    • Europe
    • Asia
    • Africa
    • Australia
    • South America
  • Politics
  • Business
    • Finance
    • Investing
    • Markets
    • Economy
    • Small Business
    • Crypto
  • Money
  • Lifestyle
  • Sports
  • Videos
  • Topics
    • Entertainment
    • Health
    • Tech
    • Travel
  • More Articles
 Markets Login
Pure Info NewsPure Info News
Home » Supply fixation won’t solve the problem alone. Let’s make an old model new again
Australia

Supply fixation won’t solve the problem alone. Let’s make an old model new again

News RoomNews RoomJune 6, 2026No Comments
Facebook Twitter WhatsApp Telegram Pinterest Email
Supply fixation won’t solve the problem alone. Let’s make an old model new again

Opinion

Tone WheelerAustralian Architecture Association president

June 6, 2026 — 11:30am

June 6, 2026 — 11:30am

You have reached your maximum number of saved items.

Remove items from your saved list to add more.

Increasing housing supply has been the government’s focus for four years, to solve an affordability crisis. But no matter how much cash, or rhetoric, is thrown at supply, it’s now apparent that it’s not helping Millennials to enter the housing market.

Supply was doomed from the get-go. The government’s initial target of 1.2 million new homes in five years could never be met. Reasons are manifold: steeply rising construction costs, material shortages, lethargic council approvals and increasingly onerous regulations, as well as critical labour shortages.

The three-storey block of flats. Can an old idea be new again?

Extra workers are hard to find. Tradies can earn more on infrastructure projects, and it’s hard to lure the young off keyboards into arduous work such as bricklaying. TAFE has not kept up with apprenticeships, and immigration has not prioritised the skilled trades needed for housing.

Projects don’t stack up financially; there are increased insolvencies among builders; crackdowns by the NSW Building Commissioner mean fewer builders will take risks. The industry can’t be driven any further or faster.

Consequently, there’s a physical limit to the number of homes that can be built in any year. Supply is not keeping pace with population growth or increasing as fast as the government hoped.

Related Article

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese with Housing Minister Clare O’Neil and SA Premier Peter Malinauskas during the 2025 federal election spruiking his plan to build 1.2 million homes by mid-2029.

A better way to see, and solve, the problem is to pivot from “supply” to “ownership”. The recent budget is evidence of a change of tack. Supply is still mentioned throughout (you can’t easily shake a shibboleth), but now the language used to support changes to negative gearing and capital gains tax emphasises intergenerational equity, to assist “ownership”. Touting ownership as the new aim helped empower a broken election promise.

Home ownership is a powerful rubric. Before and after World War II, it was invoked by Labor leaders Ben Chifley and John Curtin as the main aim for Labor, and Robert Menzies promoted Australia as “a property-owning democracy” in his appeal to the “forgotten people” in 1942.

Home ownership is a great idea in three ways: social strength and inclusion, environmental improvement, and financial security. These are often referred to as the triple bottom line.

In an owned home, a household’s health, security and stability grows, fostering identity and belonging, a sense of agency and civic pride. It gives dignity and a base from which people can participate in a community and society generally. It creates communal social security.

Related Article

Cost of building a house breakdown

Second, an owned home is environmentally better than an equivalent rental, as owners have an incentive for better maintenance and to invest in upgrades, including using grants for photovoltaics to reduce energy demand and improve climate resilience.

Home ownership provides financial stability for a household, and society generally, building modest wealth over time without speculative risk. It enables households to borrow against it for health, education and lifestyle.

But ownership is heavily skewed in Australia: a third of households own their home outright, and many have a second, third or 10th dwelling. Another third are mortgaged, hoping to join the first third, but suffering the vagaries of the Reserve Bank of Australia’s decisions on interest rates. And the last third can only rent, often from the first third.

The solution to the housing crisis is to move that last third into ownership. And that’s not an issue of supply. Arithmetically, we have enough homes: our last census showed about 11 million dwellings for 10 million households.

Related Article

People could choose pre-fab parts of housing under the rollout nationwide of a scheme aimed at cutting construction costs.

It’s a problem of distribution, which could be accelerated with two further pivots: change our dwelling types, and change the funding.

We build the wrong homes for Millennials. Seventy per cent of our existing housing stock comprises suburban family homes, but less than 50 per cent of households are families. The demographics have changed. The recent alternative has been high-rise apartments, but they are too costly to build (and maintain). Most of our housing is too big or too expensive for singles and couples starting out.

We do need to build more dwellings, but we need them to appropriately house the people we have. It means changing the type and size of what is built.

Townhouses are good, but better is the “low and close” of a well-known typology: the three-storey, walk-up flat. Loved by occupiers but also loathed for the plain bulky form and garish coloured bricks – especially those built in the ’70s – three-storey blocks of flats have been largely banned from our cities by planners’ zoning rules. And yet modest apartment buildings are ideal infill housing in the “missing middle” suburbs where they fit right in, using existing infrastructure and enhancing the “three S’s”: services, shops and schools. Where appropriate, they could replace standalone houses and yield a tenfold increase in households.

Related Article

Rather than multi-storey apartment blocks, CEDA has proposed property holders be allowed to subdivide their homes for dual occupancy.

The suggested tax changes don’t go far enough. It’s not enough to discourage property investment; we need to positively discriminate towards home ownership by swapping tax breaks away from negative gearing and towards first home buyers. There’s a raft of measures to be considered, including tax relief on mortgage payments and differential interest rates, with first home buyers charged less (say 2 to 3 per cent) than buyers of second or investment homes.

Ownership is a better goal than increased supply, and the budget measures are a good start, but there’s lots more unpalatable work in the next budget if real change is to come.

Tone Wheeler is president of the Australian Architecture Association and the design director of environa studio, which specialises in social and sustainable architecture.

You have reached your maximum number of saved items.

Remove items from your saved list to add more.

Tone WheelerTone Wheeler is president of the Australian Architecture Association and the design director of environa studio, which specialises in social and sustainable architecture.

From our partners

Read the full article here

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Telegram WhatsApp Email

Related News

How to watch the Socceroos at South Bank

How to watch the Socceroos at South Bank

Federal Liberals turn to Nationals boss Lincoln Folo to help revive party’s fortunes

Federal Liberals turn to Nationals boss Lincoln Folo to help revive party’s fortunes

Christopher Luxon labels potential New Zealand levy a ‘wrecking ball’ for the economy

Christopher Luxon labels potential New Zealand levy a ‘wrecking ball’ for the economy

This Aireys Inlet land was a developer’s dream, but the community had other plans

This Aireys Inlet land was a developer’s dream, but the community had other plans

How girls are helping Sydney councils to design appealing spaces to meet and play

How girls are helping Sydney councils to design appealing spaces to meet and play

Melbourne Jewish students targeted with slurs during interschool sport

Melbourne Jewish students targeted with slurs during interschool sport

Shots fired at events venue in south-western Sydney

Shots fired at events venue in south-western Sydney

Melbourne train tap-and-go: How to use contactless payments instead of myki

Melbourne train tap-and-go: How to use contactless payments instead of myki

Diver in his 30s critical after being bitten by shark off coast of Albany

Diver in his 30s critical after being bitten by shark off coast of Albany

Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Editors Picks

Stéphane Dion says Canada needs more diplomats to build ties with Europe

June 6, 2026
How to watch the Socceroos at South Bank

How to watch the Socceroos at South Bank

June 6, 2026
‘Off Campus’ Star Mika Abdalla and Jake Short Break Silence on Resurfaced Podcast Clip After Split (Exclusive)

‘Off Campus’ Star Mika Abdalla and Jake Short Break Silence on Resurfaced Podcast Clip After Split (Exclusive)

June 6, 2026
Delaney Hall snack purchases cast doubt on hunger strike reports, DHS says

Delaney Hall snack purchases cast doubt on hunger strike reports, DHS says

June 6, 2026
Could Noah’s Ark remains be buried in Turkey? New findings revive age-old debate

Could Noah’s Ark remains be buried in Turkey? New findings revive age-old debate

June 6, 2026

Latest News

Victor Wembanyama admits to harsh truths after costly mistake at end of NBA Finals game

Victor Wembanyama admits to harsh truths after costly mistake at end of NBA Finals game

June 6, 2026
Can’t wait for the Lucas Museum to open? Visit this little-known SoCal gem – that’s free to the public

Can’t wait for the Lucas Museum to open? Visit this little-known SoCal gem – that’s free to the public

June 6, 2026
Federal Liberals turn to Nationals boss Lincoln Folo to help revive party’s fortunes

Federal Liberals turn to Nationals boss Lincoln Folo to help revive party’s fortunes

June 6, 2026

Subscribe to News

Get the latest US news and updates directly to your inbox.

Advertisement
Demo
Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest TikTok Instagram
2026 © Prices.com LLC. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms
  • Press Release
  • For Advertisers
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

Sign In or Register

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below.

Lost password?