Home arrow Real Estate News arrow New South Wales arrow HIA Housing Report Card: No NSW Recovery in Sight

HIA Housing Report Card: No NSW Recovery in Sight

PDF Print E-mail
Written by HIA Announcement   
Thursday, 21 August 2008

HIA, Australia’s largest building industry association, today released the most comprehensive report card available on the New South Wales residential sector.

The report highlights on-going weak conditions for home building activity that will see the shortage of housing stock in New South Wales blow out to 18,000 dwellings in 2008/09 alone.

Commenting today on the release of the June 2008 quarter HIA NSW State Outlook publication, HIA Executive Director, NSW, Mr Graham Wolfe said that housing starts would languish below the 30,000 mark for the third year in a row in 2008/09.

“Sharply higher borrowing rates and building materials prices, together with hefty statutory costs to building, mean a recovery in new home building remains some way off,” said Graham Wolfe.

“The time for navel gazing has long past, this is not a cyclical trend that will correct itself,” said Mr Wolfe.

New dwelling starts are forecast to hold steady in 2008/09, marking an unprecedented sixth year in a row when new home building will have failed to mount a sustainable recovery.

“Interest rate reductions will, in time, boost confidence and then construction activity, but that’s a 2009/10 story. We have a relatively inelastic supply side, so no immediate bounce is expected and this is bad news particularly for those searching for affordable rental
housing,” Mr Wolfe said.

“We expect the recovery to be modest over 2009/10 – 2010/11 given the lack of skilled labour in the industry and the long road ahead in lifting housing affordability to reasonable levels,” said Graham Wolfe.

On a brighter note, the renovations sector appears relatively resilient.

“It’s hard to see renovations activity growing in the current economic climate, but even a largely flat year will see the sector worth around $8.8 billion in 2008/09 and the down cycle hasn’t been as savage as that evident for new construction,” added Mr Wolfe.

Total investment in renovations is forecast to reach around $9.7 billion by 2010/11.


Related Items :

 
Next >

Latest Articles

(26/06) Breeding New Life into Landmark Sites

Melbourne's love of inner-city living has rendered many of its prominent, sometimes derelict, sites ripe for redevelopment. ...

(30/03) Donvale Suburb Profile

Donvale is located immediately east of Doncaster East, about 24 kilometres from the CBD. ...

(30/03) Doncaster and Doncaster East Suburb Profile

Surprisingly close to the city via the Eastern Freeway, Doncaster is a hilly suburb located about 17 kilometres east of the CBD. ...

(30/03) Dingley Village and Springvale South Suburb Profile

Dingley Village is wedged between Dandenong and the Moorabbin Airport, about 30 kilometres south-east of the CBD, along the Princes Freeway. ...

(30/03) Diamond Creek Suburb Profile

Diamond Creek is located about 28 kilometres north-east of the Melbourne CBD, past Heidelberg, Rosanna and Greensborough. ...

Latest Blog Entries

(19/05) Could Southbank's apartment market be headed for another over-supply?

Since the start of this year, residential development sites worth more than $80 million have been exchanged, or are under negotiation - in deals expected to result in up to 10 new high-rise towers ove...

(06/02) CBA First to Pass on RBA Interest Rate Rise, and Then Some

The latest interest rate rise, the fourth in the last six months and eleventh straight since 2002, will add about $100 a month to my mortgage repayments. ...

(03/02) When to Bump Rent up and by How Much

Despite being a landlord for four years, I’ve never actually had to impose a rent rise on a tenant. ...

(01/01) What to do with St Kilda Road...

St Kilda Road will always be remembered as the precinct to pioneer high rise apartment living in this city. Dotted in amongst the retained mansions, and tired old office buildings, are some of the mos...

(20/12) Will buyers be forced into apartment living?

Anyone who played (or plays) the computer game Simcity would understand the predicament Melbourne planners are in right now. On the one hand, Melbourne’s population is growing – with som...