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Responding to the Minister’s address, HIA Managing Director Jocelyn Martin said, “the priority now is turning policy and funding into outcomes - more serviced land, faster approvals and more homes. Coordinated action across all levels of government is now critical to turn ambition into outcomes.
“Acknowledging the housing shortfall stems from multiple, interlinked policy failures marks an important shift in the national debate.
“Australia’s housing crisis is not the result of a single policy failure - and it will not be solved by a single reform.
“Planning systems, infrastructure delivery, tax settings, workforce shortages, productivity constraints and regulatory burden have combined over decades to restrict housing supply.
“Decades of underperformance from all levels of government have contributed to the current challenges and highlights the scale of reform required.
“Fragmented decision-making across federal, state and local governments has made it harder, slower and more expensive to build homes.
“Fixing this requires genuine coordination across governments and with the industry that delivers housing.
“Without alignment across planning, taxation and investment settings, infrastructure funding and delivery, supply will continue to fall short.
“With this in mind, HIA welcomes moves to bring together Housing, Planning and Building Ministers, as a necessary step toward a more coordinated national approach.
“Bringing jurisdictions together is essential. For too long there has been disjointed policy settings across Ministerial portfolios and too much finger pointing on who is to blame as opposed to a coordinated ownership of the problems and solutions.”
"The significant infrastructure investment by the Federal Government, including the additional $2 billion investment announced in the recent budget, is welcomed but it now must be backed by stronger accountability by states and local governments to ensure it delivers build-ready land at speed.
“Funding should be tied to clear housing outcomes, with a ‘use it or lose it’ approach to ensure delivery at pace. Builders need to see this investment convert into serviced land, faster approvals and projects ready to commence.”
Ms Martin said, “today’s additional $40 million investment in greater innovation and MMC is welcome support to create a greater uplift in use of prefabrication and modular construction. We see the willingness of builders to innovate and investigate new methods of construction, but support is needed to make ideas feasible and improve productivity.
“The new inquiry to be led by the Productivity Commission into the rules and regulations that impact housing supply, land use, and the delivery of infrastructure will identify opportunities for reform. Better understanding will drive commitment and more action from everyone that plays a part to deliver Australian housing.
“While the significant efforts of the government to address barriers to supply are welcomed, HIA warned changes to investor tax settings risk undermining broader supply-side reforms.
“At a time when governments are working to increase supply, policy settings must reinforce that objective - not work against it.
“Private investment is critical to delivering new housing. Any reduction in investor confidence risks fewer projects, delayed delivery and reduced supply.”
HIA reiterated that meeting housing targets depends on restoring project viability.
“Targets and ambition don’t build homes - feasible projects do. Addressing costs, delays and productivity is essential to ensure projects proceed and supply is sustained.
Industry stands ready to work with all levels of government to remove barriers and deliver more homes for Australians,” concluded Ms Martin.
The Housing Industry Association (HIA) is calling on the Tasmanian Government to reaffirm its commitment to introduce Development Assessment Panels (DAPs) policy, following statements from the Minister for Housing and Planning at yesterday’s Budget Estimates hearings.
“The Housing Industry Association (HIA) is urging the Senate to amend the Government’s proposed negative gearing and capital gains tax changes, raising concerns about their impact on the housing market and putting forward amendments to improve the flawed policy, including broadening the definition of new homes.
As the 2025/26 financial year draws to a close, now is the time to get your business ready for tax time and the changes coming from 1 July 2026.
The Housing Industry Association (HIA) is calling on the Victorian Government to withdraw proposed legislation that will expose home builders to fines over $10,000 if they fail to get the right paperwork to their client before conducting extra building work the client has asked them to do.