Enter your email and password to access secured content, members only resources and discount prices.
Did you become a member online? If not, you will need to activate your account to login.
If you are having problems logging in, please call HIA helpdesk on 1300 650 620 during business hours.
If you are having problems logging in, please call HIA helpdesk on 1300 650 620 during business hours.
Enables quick and easy registration for future events or learning and grants access to expert advice and valuable resources.
Enter your details below and create a login
The Australian Financial Review article (13 January 2026) “Wind back capital gains tax break, Labor told” rests on a fundamental misdiagnosis of Australia’s housing challenge.
Australia’s housing market is increasingly defined by a structural imbalance between strong underlying demand and persistently weak supply. While much of the policy focus has rightly centred on planning systems, land supply, infrastructure charging, and construction costs, taxation settings affecting housing investment have become a growing focus of public debate. Negative gearing and capital gains tax discount are frequently cited as primary drivers of housing affordability pressures.
Australia’s housing affordability crisis is set to get even worse. This means the ‘catch up’ required will get even bigger.
There’s some good news that has flown under the radar in recent months with all the talk of inflation, interest rates and international developments around tariffs, trade wars and actual wars – and that is building costs.