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Releasing HIA’s new report, Taxation of Housing and its Impact on Supply, Tim Reardon, Chief Economist of Housing Industry Association, said governments cannot make homes cheaper by taking more from them.
“You don’t fix a housing shortage by taxing housing harder,” Mr Reardon said.
“And you certainly don’t make homes more affordable by destabilising the tax settings that support new home construction.”
The report finds that housing is already one of the most heavily taxed sectors in the Australian economy, with taxes applied at every stage of the housing lifecycle. Many of these taxes fall most heavily on new housing, directly increasing costs and reducing the feasibility of new projects.
“The political reflex has been the same for decades,” Mr Reardon said.
“First it was to blame investors. Then foreigners. Then foreign investors. Meanwhile governments quietly add more taxes, more charges and more costs to housing, and wonder why supply keeps falling short.”
HIA’s analysis shows that investors play a critical role in housing supply, commencing more than 40 per cent of new homes built in Australia, and an even higher share of apartments and rental housing.
“When you discourage investors, you don’t free up housing, you stop it being built,” Mr Reardon said.
“Investors don’t neatly switch from established homes into new construction when taxes rise. They leave the housing market altogether.”
The report challenges claims that changes to negative gearing or capital gains tax would improve affordability or help first home buyers, noting that housing prices are determined by supply and demand, but housing shortages are only resolved by building more homes.
“New homes don’t exist in isolation,” Mr Reardon said.
“They become established homes. Taxing established housing more heavily reduces the value of new housing as well, which makes fewer projects stack up.”
HIA is urging the Australian Government to provide certainty to the housing market as part of this year’s tax review.
“If governments are serious about increasing housing supply, the first step is simple,” Mr Reardon said.
“Commit to tax system stability for residential investment, rule out changes to negative gearing and capital gains tax, and stop layering new taxes onto new housing construction.
“More homes will only be built if governments stop treating housing as a revenue base and start treating it as essential infrastructure.”
The Housing Industry Association (HIA) has welcomed the Tasmanian Government’s move to crack down on copper and scrap metal theft, warning that construction site theft is adding to the risk that insurers are pricing into premiums for Tasmanian builders.
The Housing Industry Association (HIA) welcomes the Queensland Government’s continued investment in enabling infrastructure through Round 2 of the $2 billion Residential Activation Fund, but the funding must be tightly targeted to ensure it genuinely delivers new housing supply,” HIA Executive Director Queensland, Michael Roberts, said today.
The Housing Industry Association (HIA) will be sending a simple message to the inquiry into Capital Gains Tax (CGT) on residential property when it appears before the Select Committee on the Operation of the Capital Gains Tax Discount tomorrow – if you tax something more, you will get less of it.
The Housing Industry Association (HIA) has today welcomed the Tasmanian Government’s finalisation of the Building Amendment Bill 2026, ahead of its imminent introduction to Parliament. The Bill will formally pause further implementation of new National Construction Code (NCC) requirements in Tasmania.