Disclaimer: “Brisbane Now” is run by the Labor Party Brisbane City Council team. It is pretty explicitly biased in their favour.

  • surreptitiouswalk@aussie.zone
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    1 year ago

    The opposing viewpoint is that the reason apartment building is slowed is because developers are incentivised to maximise profit, and thus they are disincentivised from building too many apartments at once, creating an artificial scarcity and keeping home prices high. Developers are land-banking to the detriment of society as a whole.

    I find this hard to believe. Every time council releases land, or the state government increases allowable density, developers are licking their lips and inundating councils with applications. Why submit an application, with the architect and application costs to get a DA to sit on, if they want to create artificial scarcity. Just don’t sit on the land without a DA.

    The reality is, since covid, building companies have been collapsing left right and centre due to supply chain issues which has led to way higher building materials costs. Projects builders have started are now operating at a loss and causing builders to go bust. Furthermore, the lack of building supplies means projects can’t proceed, despite the record demand for construction work. It’s really one of those rare situations where a highly in demand industry is in recession.

    Just just way more convenient and fits the narrative to, once again, put it down to pure corporate greed.

    • Zagorath@aussie.zoneOP
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      1 year ago

      I think more than likely it’s a bit of both. The land-banking criticism has been around since before COVID, so COVID cannot be used entirely to explain it. What we often see as evidence for the benefits of broad changes to the zoning system is how frequently developers will try to build something above the height limit in high-density areas, with Council regularly approving it—because they essentially have to approve it in order to keep up with demand.

      But prices have definitely gone up, and that’s a problem. It’s not exactly clear that reducing infrastructure charges is a good response though, because that’s just going to make it harder for the Council to build the infrastructure necessary to make higher density housing provide a good quality of life. They’re also not a particularly large percentage of the overall cost, so the impact of reducing them on the actual affordability isn’t enormous. The problem needs to be addressed above the Council level.

      • surreptitiouswalk@aussie.zone
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        1 year ago

        I think your first paragraph nails it. Developers are holding off development not to introduce artificial scarcity, but to maximise development. So they keep the land empty until either they can convince the council to approve a higher density, or a change in state government gives them an avenue to bulldoze through the council roadblocks.

        At least in NSW a single graph is needed to show this relationship: https://www.planning.nsw.gov.au/policy-and-legislation/housing/housing-supply-insights/quarterly-insights-monitor-q1/trends-in-housing-supply the correlation between number of approvals and number of constructions is basically exact. Which means, the roadblock to construction is council approval, not corporate greed or developers gaming the system to generate artificial scarcity or any other conspiracy you can think of.

        I do agree that removing infrastructure charges is not a solution. From my perspective, this won’t do anything since developers aren’t blocked because of costs, but either materials supply or council blockades. Removing infrastructure charges solves neither of these issues.

      • w2qw@aussie.zone
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        1 year ago

        It depends the infrastructure costs required for the new development is more than what they recover. If it’s less and reducing them encourages more development then it gives them more revenue overall.