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“A one size fits all approach to housing policy is failing the regions,” Mr Croft said ahead of a housing roundtable being hosted by HIA in Albury this Wednesday, 8 April, preceding the Farrer by-election on 9 May.
“Nowhere is this more evident than in regional electorates such as Farrer, which has experienced strong population growth but continues to face chronic housing shortages, rising rents and limited housing choice for workers, families and young Australians.”
“Since the pandemic, regional Australia has welcomed tens of thousands of new residents seeking affordability, employment opportunities and a better quality of life. While this shift has delivered economic benefits, housing supply has simply not kept pace with demand.”
In Farrer—a vast electorate spanning the Murray and Border regions—the impacts are increasingly acute.
“Essential workers are struggling to find rental accommodation, young people are being priced out of their home communities, and local businesses are unable to attract staff because workers simply cannot find a place to live,” Mr Croft said.
“Regional communities are doing the heavy lifting when it comes to population growth, yet housing policy remains overwhelmingly metropolitan focused. This is not a fringe issue—it is a structural failure.”
Despite demand surging in regional centres, smaller towns and rural cities continue to face:
Mr Croft said what is required now is a dedicated, long term national housing plan that explicitly recognises the distinct pressures faced by regional, rural and remote communities.
“Housing must be treated as critical economic and social infrastructure, especially in regions expected to absorb future population and workforce growth,” he said.
Such a plan must:
“These challenges are clearly outlined in HIA Housing the Regions Report , which sets out a blueprint to address housing supply constraints, infrastructure gaps and work force shortages in regional Australia.”
“Without decisive action, regions like Farrer risk a future where population growth outpaces liveability—undermining the very communities Australians are choosing to move to.”
“If governments want people to live and work in the regions, they must match that ambition with a housing system designed for regional realities.”
“The housing crisis is not confined to cities—it is even more pronounced in the regions. It demands a coordinated national response that finally puts regional Australia at the centre of housing policy, not as an afterthought.
“HIA will continue to press this case nationally, including as part of this critically important Farrer by-election and through the Senate Select Committee on Productivity in Australia, which is examining objectives for a multi decade National Settlement Strategy.
“Australia can no longer rely on reactive, stop start housing policies. We need a system that plans for long term growth, improves population distribution and productivity, and puts regional Australia at the centre of a national housing policy,” Mr Croft concluded.
This year’s predictable ‘election focused’ State Budget has missed the opportunity to improve the environment for home building. It contains few positive measures to increase housing supply, address housing affordability and lower the costs facing new home builders.
“The Housing Industry Association (HIA) says the Northern Territory’s 2026–27 Budget maintains key housing incentives but falls short of the investment needed to significantly lift housing supply and address skills shortages in the construction sector,” said Luis Espinoza, HIA Executive Director, Northern Territory.
The Queensland Government has confirmed while the National Construction Code (NCC) 2025 has been formally adopted, its commencement in Queensland has been deferred until 1 May 2027.
“The 2026/27 Budget handed down by the Victorian government today once again does not deliver meaningful tax reforms that will increase housing supply, address housing affordability and lower the costs facing home builders,” says HIA Victoria Executive Director, Keith Ryan.