1 00:00:03,400 --> 00:00:06,200 Speaker 1: Called it, and welcome to this episode of Shared Lunch, 2 00:00:06,280 --> 00:00:08,160 Speaker 1: where we're going to be looking at all things home 3 00:00:08,200 --> 00:00:11,719 Speaker 1: ownership and housing and alt or. We're lucky enough to 4 00:00:11,720 --> 00:00:14,040 Speaker 1: be joined by the Minister of Housing, Chris Bishop. Thanks 5 00:00:14,040 --> 00:00:14,720 Speaker 1: so much for joining us. 6 00:00:14,800 --> 00:00:16,239 Speaker 2: Chris, good to be here. Thanks having me. 7 00:00:16,480 --> 00:00:18,319 Speaker 1: I mentioned to you just before we got started that 8 00:00:18,600 --> 00:00:20,759 Speaker 1: huge number of the people investing on the shares his 9 00:00:20,800 --> 00:00:24,200 Speaker 1: platform investing still for the purpose of home ownership, Like 10 00:00:24,239 --> 00:00:27,360 Speaker 1: it's still a massive story of New Zealanders and it 11 00:00:27,440 --> 00:00:29,480 Speaker 1: is starting to you know, we also know that it's 12 00:00:29,480 --> 00:00:31,200 Speaker 1: feeling more and more out of reach for them. So 13 00:00:31,400 --> 00:00:33,559 Speaker 1: there's lots on that, but we thought a great way 14 00:00:33,600 --> 00:00:35,919 Speaker 1: to start the conversation would be just ask you how, 15 00:00:36,040 --> 00:00:37,760 Speaker 1: you know, do you own a home and what your 16 00:00:37,760 --> 00:00:38,839 Speaker 1: path to home ownership was. 17 00:00:39,200 --> 00:00:39,600 Speaker 2: I do. 18 00:00:39,720 --> 00:00:42,640 Speaker 3: I'm very lucky my wife and I own own a house, 19 00:00:43,440 --> 00:00:46,720 Speaker 3: and you know, really conscious that that's not the experience 20 00:00:46,720 --> 00:00:49,320 Speaker 3: for many people, you know, my age and but below 21 00:00:49,760 --> 00:00:53,480 Speaker 3: just ten forty. So yeah, I mean, I like probably 22 00:00:53,479 --> 00:00:55,760 Speaker 3: a lot of his Islanders, you know, I went to university, 23 00:00:56,360 --> 00:00:59,160 Speaker 3: lived at home for a few years and then went flooding. 24 00:01:00,640 --> 00:01:03,640 Speaker 3: Rented in both Wellington and Auckland for a number of years, 25 00:01:04,760 --> 00:01:07,600 Speaker 3: brought an apartment that was my sort of entry point. 26 00:01:07,640 --> 00:01:12,400 Speaker 3: House prices were a lot lower back in twenty twelve, 27 00:01:14,440 --> 00:01:16,600 Speaker 3: so apartment was an affordable way to get on the 28 00:01:16,640 --> 00:01:20,920 Speaker 3: housing Letterer and then yeah, then moved back to Wellington, 29 00:01:21,240 --> 00:01:23,760 Speaker 3: ran for parliament and brought a house and now we 30 00:01:23,959 --> 00:01:26,200 Speaker 3: run another one. So we've just owned one house, I 31 00:01:26,200 --> 00:01:28,640 Speaker 3: should say, so like many people went from one house 32 00:01:28,680 --> 00:01:31,040 Speaker 3: to another with a very very large mortgage. 33 00:01:31,600 --> 00:01:33,360 Speaker 2: So yep, that's sort of my journey. 34 00:01:33,600 --> 00:01:36,319 Speaker 3: But yeah, very conscious that that's not the experience for 35 00:01:36,360 --> 00:01:40,200 Speaker 3: many people. And part of my big drive in housing 36 00:01:40,560 --> 00:01:42,520 Speaker 3: as Minister of Housing is to make home ownership more 37 00:01:42,520 --> 00:01:45,440 Speaker 3: affordable for people. My agent below and in fed all 38 00:01:45,520 --> 00:01:49,559 Speaker 3: his illinders. So you know, I want many more people 39 00:01:49,560 --> 00:01:51,400 Speaker 3: to have the opportunities that I and other people in 40 00:01:51,440 --> 00:01:53,520 Speaker 3: my very fortunate position been able to enjoy. Yeah. 41 00:01:53,520 --> 00:01:53,720 Speaker 2: Great. 42 00:01:53,720 --> 00:01:56,480 Speaker 1: I also hit a very lucky point in the housing market. Well, 43 00:01:56,520 --> 00:01:58,960 Speaker 1: I think I was about two thousand and fifteen or 44 00:01:59,000 --> 00:02:01,200 Speaker 1: twenty sixteen think, which I think was the end of 45 00:02:01,200 --> 00:02:04,000 Speaker 1: like a ten year flat. Yeah, part for the property market, 46 00:02:04,040 --> 00:02:05,080 Speaker 1: but it still felt like I was. 47 00:02:07,440 --> 00:02:07,600 Speaker 2: Bang. 48 00:02:07,720 --> 00:02:10,800 Speaker 3: Mom and Dad helped, so you know, getting that deposit 49 00:02:10,840 --> 00:02:14,600 Speaker 3: together for the apartment back in twenty twelve was you know, 50 00:02:14,600 --> 00:02:17,000 Speaker 3: it was a real stretch and so you know, beg Mama, 51 00:02:17,080 --> 00:02:20,799 Speaker 3: dad came to the party with a industry loan and 52 00:02:21,000 --> 00:02:23,720 Speaker 3: you know, and that's that's the experience for a lot 53 00:02:23,720 --> 00:02:25,800 Speaker 3: of young people. And we're going to try and change 54 00:02:25,840 --> 00:02:29,959 Speaker 3: that because you know, people should see housing and something 55 00:02:30,000 --> 00:02:32,200 Speaker 3: that they can get into and be able to pull 56 00:02:32,240 --> 00:02:32,920 Speaker 3: together a deposit. 57 00:02:33,240 --> 00:02:35,160 Speaker 1: Yeah, mine was a key re server, which was sort 58 00:02:35,200 --> 00:02:36,239 Speaker 1: of the saving greast together. 59 00:02:36,800 --> 00:02:38,000 Speaker 2: That was part of it as well. 60 00:02:38,120 --> 00:02:41,120 Speaker 1: Yeah. Well, I mean you touched on the prices and 61 00:02:41,160 --> 00:02:44,000 Speaker 1: the change and the affordability. But you're one of the few, 62 00:02:44,120 --> 00:02:46,280 Speaker 1: if not the only, certainly in this position to say 63 00:02:46,280 --> 00:02:49,640 Speaker 1: that house prices need to come down. And that's a 64 00:02:49,639 --> 00:02:52,760 Speaker 1: big call, I think for any politician. But what what 65 00:02:52,840 --> 00:02:54,960 Speaker 1: drove you to that point? And can you specify how 66 00:02:55,040 --> 00:02:57,120 Speaker 1: much or do you have an idea on how much 67 00:02:57,120 --> 00:02:57,840 Speaker 1: they should decrease? 68 00:02:57,919 --> 00:03:01,680 Speaker 3: By Yeah, I mean people sort of quite whipped up saying, 69 00:03:01,680 --> 00:03:03,639 Speaker 3: you know, the housing minister wants house process to fall. 70 00:03:03,680 --> 00:03:06,760 Speaker 3: But it's the natural corollary of saying that housing's two 71 00:03:07,440 --> 00:03:10,880 Speaker 3: is unaffordable, which it demonstrably is and objectively is the case. 72 00:03:10,919 --> 00:03:17,960 Speaker 3: So if, as some politicians say, you think housings unaffordable, 73 00:03:17,960 --> 00:03:20,200 Speaker 3: but you don't want prices to fall, well they're sort 74 00:03:20,200 --> 00:03:22,680 Speaker 3: of hollow words, right, because if something's. 75 00:03:22,480 --> 00:03:26,160 Speaker 2: Unaffordable, you want to be more affordable, and more affordable. 76 00:03:25,720 --> 00:03:29,160 Speaker 3: Means you've got to have you know, house process, we've 77 00:03:29,160 --> 00:03:31,200 Speaker 3: got to have got to come down, and there's a 78 00:03:31,440 --> 00:03:33,840 Speaker 3: you know, there's obviously two ways to make housing more affordable. 79 00:03:33,840 --> 00:03:38,360 Speaker 3: One as price declines and then income growth. And the 80 00:03:38,400 --> 00:03:39,960 Speaker 3: truth is we need both. So we need a much 81 00:03:40,000 --> 00:03:44,160 Speaker 3: more productive economy with rising wages that were wages rise 82 00:03:44,160 --> 00:03:47,720 Speaker 3: faster than inflation and were wages rise faster than house. 83 00:03:47,480 --> 00:03:49,400 Speaker 2: Price growth, so that people can catch up. 84 00:03:49,480 --> 00:03:53,240 Speaker 3: But also you know, at the at the house price level, 85 00:03:53,240 --> 00:03:55,040 Speaker 3: you need them to come down, and over time we 86 00:03:55,320 --> 00:03:57,840 Speaker 3: want to. That's the driving force of the government is 87 00:03:57,880 --> 00:04:00,640 Speaker 3: to make housing more affordable. So to answer question around 88 00:04:00,720 --> 00:04:05,600 Speaker 3: around what and where, you know, a good measure of 89 00:04:07,080 --> 00:04:10,760 Speaker 3: an affordable housing market is where house prices are between 90 00:04:10,800 --> 00:04:12,880 Speaker 3: three and five times average household income. 91 00:04:14,080 --> 00:04:15,480 Speaker 2: That's not the case at the moment. 92 00:04:15,520 --> 00:04:18,560 Speaker 3: You know, Queenstown is an outlier example, but you know 93 00:04:18,560 --> 00:04:21,479 Speaker 3: it's eleven to one Auckland is about nine to one. 94 00:04:21,640 --> 00:04:23,880 Speaker 3: Average is about seven seven and a half eight to 95 00:04:23,960 --> 00:04:26,280 Speaker 3: one In New Zealand. The numbers bounce around a bit 96 00:04:26,320 --> 00:04:28,560 Speaker 3: and depending on what measure you use, but you know, 97 00:04:29,000 --> 00:04:32,480 Speaker 3: by any objective measure, New Zealand house prices are severely 98 00:04:32,560 --> 00:04:36,320 Speaker 3: unaffordable and over the last twenty years we have had 99 00:04:36,320 --> 00:04:40,159 Speaker 3: the fastest house price growth in the OECD in the 100 00:04:40,200 --> 00:04:42,719 Speaker 3: Western world. And you just look at New Zealand and 101 00:04:42,760 --> 00:04:46,279 Speaker 3: you say, we're five million people, not that many. We're 102 00:04:46,279 --> 00:04:48,960 Speaker 3: going to land master size of the United Kingdom, so 103 00:04:49,080 --> 00:04:52,440 Speaker 3: pretty big country actually relative to our population. But we 104 00:04:52,480 --> 00:04:55,960 Speaker 3: have designed a planning system and a funding system for 105 00:04:55,960 --> 00:05:01,840 Speaker 3: infrastructure that makes house prices out of control and it's nuts. 106 00:05:02,200 --> 00:05:04,680 Speaker 3: And that's the driving force of our housing policy is 107 00:05:05,040 --> 00:05:09,320 Speaker 3: rather than tinker around the edges with you know, things 108 00:05:09,320 --> 00:05:12,039 Speaker 3: that kind of feel good but don't actually do a lot, 109 00:05:12,200 --> 00:05:14,320 Speaker 3: the driving force of our housing policies to get to 110 00:05:14,320 --> 00:05:17,000 Speaker 3: grips with the underlying fundamentals, which is about land supply, 111 00:05:17,400 --> 00:05:21,240 Speaker 3: infrastructure funding and incentives on councils to make sure that 112 00:05:21,279 --> 00:05:24,160 Speaker 3: they see housing as a benefit rather than a burden, 113 00:05:24,200 --> 00:05:26,400 Speaker 3: which is what they do too much. 114 00:05:26,440 --> 00:05:27,160 Speaker 2: So at the moment. 115 00:05:27,760 --> 00:05:31,280 Speaker 1: Yeah, so many questions out of what you've just said there, 116 00:05:31,320 --> 00:05:33,600 Speaker 1: but just interested out of that what your thoughts are 117 00:05:33,640 --> 00:05:36,719 Speaker 1: on home ownership in New Zealand You've already touched on. 118 00:05:36,760 --> 00:05:38,520 Speaker 1: You believe people should be able to own their own home, 119 00:05:38,680 --> 00:05:42,760 Speaker 1: So maybe more about as an investment vehicle verse productive 120 00:05:42,760 --> 00:05:44,880 Speaker 1: assets that are more likely to grow incomes and things. 121 00:05:44,960 --> 00:05:47,120 Speaker 3: Yeah, I mean home ownership in Zealand's down to sixty 122 00:05:47,120 --> 00:05:48,520 Speaker 3: three percent so is a record low. 123 00:05:48,640 --> 00:05:50,000 Speaker 2: So we want to improve that. 124 00:05:50,040 --> 00:05:51,960 Speaker 3: You know, we want Zilin to be a property owning 125 00:05:52,000 --> 00:05:53,839 Speaker 3: democracy where people can get a foot on the ladder. 126 00:05:54,120 --> 00:05:57,200 Speaker 3: It's an issue of intergenerational equity. You know, people my 127 00:05:57,320 --> 00:06:00,520 Speaker 3: age and younger. I used to be a young I 128 00:06:00,520 --> 00:06:02,440 Speaker 3: think forty. I'm no longer a young MP of a 129 00:06:02,440 --> 00:06:04,320 Speaker 3: middle asied as an MP. But you know, peat people 130 00:06:04,400 --> 00:06:05,960 Speaker 3: my age and below. You know, they look at a 131 00:06:05,960 --> 00:06:09,560 Speaker 3: housing market and it's unaffordable, as you know and as 132 00:06:09,560 --> 00:06:10,880 Speaker 3: many of the listeners will know. 133 00:06:11,040 --> 00:06:12,040 Speaker 2: So we want to change that. 134 00:06:13,120 --> 00:06:16,839 Speaker 3: And there are lots of reasons for that. There's an 135 00:06:16,880 --> 00:06:20,720 Speaker 3: equity issue around it, particularly a generational issue. There's also 136 00:06:20,760 --> 00:06:23,800 Speaker 3: a ginormous fiscal cost to government out of the housing market. 137 00:06:23,920 --> 00:06:26,560 Speaker 3: So we spend as a government five billion dollars a 138 00:06:26,680 --> 00:06:30,440 Speaker 3: year on housing subsidies across accommodation supplement, income related rents, 139 00:06:30,440 --> 00:06:34,120 Speaker 3: emergency housing, the whole range of other housing products. It's 140 00:06:34,160 --> 00:06:36,720 Speaker 3: a ginormous fiscal cost for government. And of course all 141 00:06:36,720 --> 00:06:39,640 Speaker 3: of that money is money that we can't spend on 142 00:06:39,680 --> 00:06:41,920 Speaker 3: the police, on the health system, on the education system, 143 00:06:41,920 --> 00:06:45,040 Speaker 3: things like that, because the housing market dysfunctional. So government 144 00:06:45,120 --> 00:06:48,400 Speaker 3: money just ends up chasing the housing market and filling 145 00:06:48,440 --> 00:06:52,640 Speaker 3: in the blanks and trying to fix up regulatory errors 146 00:06:52,640 --> 00:06:54,360 Speaker 3: that have been made through the planning system and the 147 00:06:54,400 --> 00:07:01,400 Speaker 3: infrastructure funding system. So it's a ginormous cative effect for government. 148 00:07:02,000 --> 00:07:04,520 Speaker 3: And then and then there are just the productivity benefits 149 00:07:04,560 --> 00:07:10,400 Speaker 3: of more housing. So what's really clear is cities, cities 150 00:07:10,440 --> 00:07:14,520 Speaker 3: that grow are engines of productivity and engines of economic growth. 151 00:07:14,600 --> 00:07:16,640 Speaker 3: And that's the big thing New Zealand needs. We need 152 00:07:16,680 --> 00:07:20,640 Speaker 3: more productivity, we need economic growth. And one of the 153 00:07:20,680 --> 00:07:22,800 Speaker 3: things I constantly say, and I'm on a bit of 154 00:07:22,800 --> 00:07:27,320 Speaker 3: a persuasion campaign around, you know, in public life, is 155 00:07:27,320 --> 00:07:29,120 Speaker 3: to persuade people one of the single best things we 156 00:07:29,160 --> 00:07:32,000 Speaker 3: can do to get the economy going and get productivity 157 00:07:32,040 --> 00:07:33,880 Speaker 3: up in New Zealand is to fix our housing market. 158 00:07:34,560 --> 00:07:36,560 Speaker 3: And part of that goes to your point, which is 159 00:07:38,600 --> 00:07:42,440 Speaker 3: making sure that people don't just see the housing market 160 00:07:42,520 --> 00:07:46,360 Speaker 3: as this giant vehicle for capital gains where they can 161 00:07:46,400 --> 00:07:48,560 Speaker 3: just shovel as much money into the housing market as 162 00:07:48,560 --> 00:07:53,960 Speaker 3: possible into second properties and third properties and see massive 163 00:07:54,320 --> 00:07:58,440 Speaker 3: capital gains and sit on those but you know, investing 164 00:07:58,480 --> 00:08:03,280 Speaker 3: in productive New Zealand businesses, you know, in the real 165 00:08:03,320 --> 00:08:07,240 Speaker 3: economy rather than the housing market economy. And so again, 166 00:08:07,520 --> 00:08:10,640 Speaker 3: fixing the underlying fundamentals of the housing market will rebalance 167 00:08:10,680 --> 00:08:14,360 Speaker 3: the economy. And so there's multiple reasons to solve housing 168 00:08:15,080 --> 00:08:16,840 Speaker 3: and you know it's we're very fixated on it. 169 00:08:17,120 --> 00:08:19,240 Speaker 1: Yeah, most where doesn't know the housing market with a 170 00:08:19,280 --> 00:08:20,040 Speaker 1: bits tacked on. 171 00:08:20,360 --> 00:08:21,760 Speaker 2: I think I might have been just INDERI said that. 172 00:08:23,480 --> 00:08:25,640 Speaker 3: You would hear me say this very often, but you 173 00:08:25,640 --> 00:08:27,680 Speaker 3: know it's not it's not. It's not the world's most 174 00:08:27,720 --> 00:08:28,600 Speaker 3: unfair comedy, right. 175 00:08:28,720 --> 00:08:30,960 Speaker 1: Yeah, I'm interested to see what this sort of market 176 00:08:31,040 --> 00:08:33,520 Speaker 1: dynamic with interest rates changing very quickly in another direction 177 00:08:34,040 --> 00:08:37,480 Speaker 1: after a very long bullish run, boyd by lots of 178 00:08:37,520 --> 00:08:40,959 Speaker 1: reasons which could continue. But I still really really am 179 00:08:40,960 --> 00:08:44,280 Speaker 1: passionate about people being able to invest in their own home, sorry, 180 00:08:44,280 --> 00:08:46,320 Speaker 1: buy their own home. And I also think it's an 181 00:08:46,360 --> 00:08:49,600 Speaker 1: amazing creator of wealth for people over time in a 182 00:08:49,640 --> 00:08:53,319 Speaker 1: generational aspect for all sorts of communities, but probably more 183 00:08:53,360 --> 00:08:57,400 Speaker 1: than anything for for for people who are making money 184 00:08:57,400 --> 00:09:00,720 Speaker 1: out of housing. Is New Zealand has very default rates 185 00:09:00,720 --> 00:09:02,520 Speaker 1: on mortgages and home loans, so it's just like this 186 00:09:02,600 --> 00:09:06,920 Speaker 1: compulsory savings plan over and over again, which sort of 187 00:09:07,640 --> 00:09:09,640 Speaker 1: leads me into my next question, which is thinking about 188 00:09:10,840 --> 00:09:14,240 Speaker 1: how you sort of mentioned the economy around this, how 189 00:09:14,280 --> 00:09:16,560 Speaker 1: it's gone. You know, it's gone decades as far as 190 00:09:16,600 --> 00:09:19,120 Speaker 1: a problem the housing aspect of New Zealand. Do you 191 00:09:19,120 --> 00:09:21,400 Speaker 1: think there's any way we could look at this in 192 00:09:21,480 --> 00:09:24,400 Speaker 1: any sort of single mandate mindset where we can see 193 00:09:24,400 --> 00:09:28,319 Speaker 1: continuation over a longer longer than a sort of parliamentary 194 00:09:28,440 --> 00:09:32,479 Speaker 1: term type investments like the example of read by some commentators. 195 00:09:32,600 --> 00:09:35,439 Speaker 1: Is the Reserve Bank coming into control inflation or is 196 00:09:35,480 --> 00:09:37,280 Speaker 1: there any way that you can see us really working 197 00:09:37,280 --> 00:09:41,559 Speaker 1: together in a Biparsson manna to achieve these outcomes? 198 00:09:41,760 --> 00:09:44,559 Speaker 3: Yeah, I think the prospect of that is actually quite good. 199 00:09:44,840 --> 00:09:49,400 Speaker 3: So the thrust of our housing policy picks up on 200 00:09:49,440 --> 00:09:54,000 Speaker 3: the best of what labor did, so Phil Tweyford and 201 00:09:54,160 --> 00:09:57,640 Speaker 3: the last government back in twenty nineteen twenty pass I 202 00:09:57,640 --> 00:10:00,520 Speaker 3: think called the National Policy Statement on urven Development, which 203 00:10:00,679 --> 00:10:03,640 Speaker 3: is the thing that allows for or essentially mandates councils 204 00:10:03,640 --> 00:10:06,640 Speaker 3: to up zone around train stations and city centers so 205 00:10:06,760 --> 00:10:11,000 Speaker 3: allow more apartments, you know, bigger buildings in city centers, 206 00:10:11,080 --> 00:10:16,600 Speaker 3: metropolitan city centers and around train stations. That, by the way, 207 00:10:16,720 --> 00:10:22,280 Speaker 3: has has had world acclaim and is in the process 208 00:10:22,280 --> 00:10:26,040 Speaker 3: of being implemented in Cross CHURCHUALKND well into other cities. 209 00:10:26,880 --> 00:10:30,280 Speaker 3: So our housing policy picks up on that and doubles 210 00:10:30,320 --> 00:10:33,040 Speaker 3: down on that in a way. So we've announced a 211 00:10:33,080 --> 00:10:35,400 Speaker 3: package which we haven't implemented yet, but announced to package 212 00:10:35,440 --> 00:10:39,400 Speaker 3: where we will go further, so more mixed use zoning 213 00:10:39,440 --> 00:10:45,880 Speaker 3: for example, which is essentially a zoning term for more 214 00:10:45,920 --> 00:10:48,840 Speaker 3: cafes and supermarkets and boutiques and bodegas and things like 215 00:10:48,880 --> 00:10:51,280 Speaker 3: that in and around apartments and places where people want 216 00:10:51,320 --> 00:10:53,600 Speaker 3: to live. So that the way planners view cities is 217 00:10:54,600 --> 00:10:57,280 Speaker 3: you know, you live here, and you work over here 218 00:10:57,400 --> 00:10:59,920 Speaker 3: in the commercial area, and then you know you've got 219 00:11:00,120 --> 00:11:02,439 Speaker 3: industrial area over here, and then you go shopping on 220 00:11:02,480 --> 00:11:05,440 Speaker 3: the weekend or at night over here, and you know, 221 00:11:05,520 --> 00:11:06,600 Speaker 3: never the Twain shall meet. 222 00:11:07,240 --> 00:11:09,120 Speaker 2: Actually, it's not the way people live their lives. It's 223 00:11:09,160 --> 00:11:10,480 Speaker 2: not the way people want to live their lives. 224 00:11:10,520 --> 00:11:14,160 Speaker 3: And so mixed use owning is about liberalizing our planning 225 00:11:14,200 --> 00:11:17,280 Speaker 3: laws to allow people to do more with their own 226 00:11:17,360 --> 00:11:20,120 Speaker 3: property and create more Liverpool cities. So we're going to 227 00:11:20,160 --> 00:11:22,600 Speaker 3: make sure that we're going to mandate that in our 228 00:11:22,640 --> 00:11:24,880 Speaker 3: major cities. We're going to get rid of minimum apartment 229 00:11:24,920 --> 00:11:28,160 Speaker 3: sizes in our cities, which again is a liberalizing effect 230 00:11:28,160 --> 00:11:30,640 Speaker 3: to mean that people who want to build departments of 231 00:11:30,640 --> 00:11:32,040 Speaker 3: certain size can do. So we're going to get rid 232 00:11:32,040 --> 00:11:35,480 Speaker 3: of minimum balcony requirements, for example, balcony requirements. There's a 233 00:11:35,480 --> 00:11:38,679 Speaker 3: study out a few years ago. Balcony requirements add fifty 234 00:11:38,840 --> 00:11:40,800 Speaker 3: to seventy thousand bucks to the cost of an apartment 235 00:11:40,800 --> 00:11:43,920 Speaker 3: in Auckland, so it has you know, if you want 236 00:11:43,920 --> 00:11:45,760 Speaker 3: to have it at a balcony, that's fine, but they shouldn't 237 00:11:45,760 --> 00:11:46,439 Speaker 3: be mandatory. 238 00:11:47,480 --> 00:11:48,800 Speaker 2: I've got a whole piece of work. 239 00:11:48,679 --> 00:11:51,400 Speaker 3: I'm about to kick off around urban design, for example, 240 00:11:51,440 --> 00:11:56,040 Speaker 3: because one of the issues is that councils impose largely 241 00:11:56,080 --> 00:11:59,959 Speaker 3: subjective design requirements on housing, and they're not a week 242 00:12:00,120 --> 00:12:04,800 Speaker 3: of the economic effects of doing those mandatory where they 243 00:12:05,000 --> 00:12:08,800 Speaker 3: they're they're not mandatory, but they become mandatory because what 244 00:12:08,920 --> 00:12:11,199 Speaker 3: happens is the council planner says, oh, be good if 245 00:12:11,200 --> 00:12:13,160 Speaker 3: you could do this to the property, or good if 246 00:12:13,160 --> 00:12:15,720 Speaker 3: you could do that, and the developer you know, or 247 00:12:15,679 --> 00:12:18,840 Speaker 3: whoever's building the house essentially has to do it. Otherwise 248 00:12:18,840 --> 00:12:20,719 Speaker 3: the resource concent doesn't happen, or it happens a lot 249 00:12:20,720 --> 00:12:23,920 Speaker 3: more slowly. So give you an example, a classic example 250 00:12:23,920 --> 00:12:26,440 Speaker 3: that I got told about a few weeks ago. There's 251 00:12:26,440 --> 00:12:30,240 Speaker 3: a social housing developer in Napier who's building social housing 252 00:12:30,320 --> 00:12:34,480 Speaker 3: so you know, not particularly ornate, just affordable housing for 253 00:12:34,600 --> 00:12:37,040 Speaker 3: low income people. The council said, oh, we want you 254 00:12:37,080 --> 00:12:39,520 Speaker 3: to put a Juliette balcony on all of the apartments. Well, 255 00:12:39,600 --> 00:12:41,960 Speaker 3: Juliette balconies are those, you know, I think they're named 256 00:12:41,960 --> 00:12:44,679 Speaker 3: after Romeo and Juliette, like, you know, small little balconies. 257 00:12:44,840 --> 00:12:46,440 Speaker 2: Well, you know, look, do they look great? Yeah? 258 00:12:46,440 --> 00:12:50,120 Speaker 3: Will probably they do. But you know, that's massively raised 259 00:12:50,160 --> 00:12:52,880 Speaker 3: the cost of putting the apartments in, and it means 260 00:12:52,920 --> 00:12:55,880 Speaker 3: the develop the social housing developer can do fewer apartments. 261 00:12:56,920 --> 00:12:58,560 Speaker 2: So that's nuts. You know, you. 262 00:12:59,080 --> 00:13:03,000 Speaker 3: Apartments in Napier don't need Juliet balconies and you shouldn't 263 00:13:03,000 --> 00:13:04,400 Speaker 3: need it. You shouldn't have to put one in to 264 00:13:04,440 --> 00:13:06,680 Speaker 3: get a resource consent. So this is the thing that 265 00:13:06,720 --> 00:13:09,040 Speaker 3: I think, you know, we're trying to grapple with when 266 00:13:09,040 --> 00:13:11,680 Speaker 3: it comes to councils is every time you impose a 267 00:13:11,720 --> 00:13:13,920 Speaker 3: requirement to do a particular thing when it comes to 268 00:13:14,000 --> 00:13:18,240 Speaker 3: a new house, that imposes cost. And we are not 269 00:13:18,320 --> 00:13:20,000 Speaker 3: in a position in New Zealand where we can just 270 00:13:20,040 --> 00:13:22,079 Speaker 3: impose unnecessary, needless. 271 00:13:21,720 --> 00:13:24,440 Speaker 2: Costs on housing. So we're going to get to grips 272 00:13:24,440 --> 00:13:24,920 Speaker 2: with all of that. 273 00:13:25,000 --> 00:13:28,040 Speaker 3: So anyway to go back to where you started, which 274 00:13:28,080 --> 00:13:32,360 Speaker 3: is bipartisanship, we've picked up what labor did and done further. 275 00:13:33,880 --> 00:13:36,200 Speaker 3: We've also picked up on the major thrust of where 276 00:13:36,200 --> 00:13:38,960 Speaker 3: Phil Tweyford was going around land use change generally. So 277 00:13:40,559 --> 00:13:44,520 Speaker 3: I want the ability for cities to grow both up 278 00:13:44,720 --> 00:13:49,440 Speaker 3: in city centers and major suburban hubs, but also out 279 00:13:49,480 --> 00:13:52,520 Speaker 3: at the city fringe as well. And you know, again 280 00:13:52,880 --> 00:13:56,000 Speaker 3: Phil Twyft had started a bit of that stuff, and 281 00:13:56,040 --> 00:13:58,880 Speaker 3: you know, you've got replaced his housing minister and the 282 00:13:59,200 --> 00:14:01,400 Speaker 3: kind of work cease. So we're picking that up again. 283 00:14:02,360 --> 00:14:04,839 Speaker 3: Whether or not labor, the current interation of the Labor Party, 284 00:14:04,880 --> 00:14:06,720 Speaker 3: you know, kind of supports that is kind of over 285 00:14:06,760 --> 00:14:11,000 Speaker 3: to the end. But certainly I think the direction of 286 00:14:11,040 --> 00:14:16,720 Speaker 3: travel is clear, which is that deregulating the housing market 287 00:14:16,880 --> 00:14:21,160 Speaker 3: and liberalizing planning restrictions and planning laws and sorting out 288 00:14:21,160 --> 00:14:26,120 Speaker 3: the infrastructure system is the answer. And there's a study 289 00:14:26,120 --> 00:14:30,280 Speaker 3: out by Ryan McGreevy in a University of Auckland that 290 00:14:30,320 --> 00:14:33,240 Speaker 3: shows that the Auckland Unitry Plan, which has kind of 291 00:14:33,240 --> 00:14:35,080 Speaker 3: started all of the stuff we've just been talking about 292 00:14:35,120 --> 00:14:39,080 Speaker 3: back in twenty sixteen, rents in Auckland are appreciably lower 293 00:14:39,240 --> 00:14:40,040 Speaker 3: as a result. 294 00:14:39,800 --> 00:14:41,800 Speaker 2: Of the building boom caused by the Aukland Unitry Plan. 295 00:14:42,280 --> 00:14:44,840 Speaker 3: So when you allow people to build and you actually 296 00:14:45,120 --> 00:14:47,640 Speaker 3: give them the regulatory conditions where they can do it, 297 00:14:48,000 --> 00:14:52,120 Speaker 3: they go and do it, and developers get involved, and 298 00:14:52,160 --> 00:14:54,400 Speaker 3: you get a housing boom. But we need more of it, 299 00:14:54,440 --> 00:14:59,480 Speaker 3: and we need year after year of sustained house building 300 00:15:00,000 --> 00:15:02,840 Speaker 3: apartments and terraces and duplexes and covetable. 301 00:15:04,160 --> 00:15:06,680 Speaker 1: About my next three questions serce, which is no, don't 302 00:15:06,680 --> 00:15:08,920 Speaker 1: be sorry, that's fantastic. We are seeing a lot about 303 00:15:08,960 --> 00:15:12,000 Speaker 1: the social housing and media and things, and obviously there's 304 00:15:12,000 --> 00:15:15,120 Speaker 1: a real big need for that, but we're you know, 305 00:15:15,560 --> 00:15:17,720 Speaker 1: the Shares's customer base tends to be more focused on 306 00:15:17,840 --> 00:15:20,200 Speaker 1: the people are feeling locked out of the buying of 307 00:15:20,240 --> 00:15:23,360 Speaker 1: the house and some of the comments coming through from 308 00:15:23,400 --> 00:15:26,560 Speaker 1: them sort of those tools are disappearing for them, and like, 309 00:15:26,680 --> 00:15:28,760 Speaker 1: how what would your sort of response be to that 310 00:15:28,800 --> 00:15:31,800 Speaker 1: with regards to what's happening from government specifically into supporting 311 00:15:31,800 --> 00:15:32,560 Speaker 1: people into. 312 00:15:32,560 --> 00:15:34,720 Speaker 2: Yeah, so look, we got rid of the first time grant. 313 00:15:34,760 --> 00:15:36,080 Speaker 2: So the first time Grant. 314 00:15:36,280 --> 00:15:40,360 Speaker 3: Was actually introduced by the last National government and continued 315 00:15:40,360 --> 00:15:43,400 Speaker 3: by Labor that provided for up to ten thousand dollars 316 00:15:43,440 --> 00:15:46,240 Speaker 3: for the purchase of a new house. The average grant 317 00:15:46,280 --> 00:15:48,520 Speaker 3: was five, but you could get up to ten. We 318 00:15:48,560 --> 00:15:50,200 Speaker 3: got rid of it because it was a very expensive 319 00:15:50,240 --> 00:15:52,960 Speaker 3: form of housing support and it didn't really make a difference. 320 00:15:53,000 --> 00:15:55,560 Speaker 3: And there are probably people out there watching who say, well, 321 00:15:55,600 --> 00:15:58,360 Speaker 3: you know, I'd like five grand or ten grand towards 322 00:15:58,360 --> 00:16:00,840 Speaker 3: a deposit, and you know, I don't blame them who wouldn't, 323 00:16:01,160 --> 00:16:04,320 Speaker 3: but you know, on average, it brought forward the purchase 324 00:16:04,320 --> 00:16:07,240 Speaker 3: of a property by about six months, so it didn't 325 00:16:07,240 --> 00:16:10,200 Speaker 3: actually make the difference between people buying a property or 326 00:16:10,240 --> 00:16:12,080 Speaker 3: being able to afford a property or not. It's just 327 00:16:12,400 --> 00:16:14,200 Speaker 3: a bit of free money to help along the way, 328 00:16:15,240 --> 00:16:18,000 Speaker 3: and you know, we've got fiscally constrained times. It's a 329 00:16:18,040 --> 00:16:22,480 Speaker 3: demand side measure as well, so it actually you know, 330 00:16:22,560 --> 00:16:25,320 Speaker 3: on the margins economically, it pushes prices up, so it 331 00:16:25,360 --> 00:16:27,280 Speaker 3: actually works counter to what you're trying to do, which 332 00:16:27,320 --> 00:16:31,080 Speaker 3: has achieved greater supply to lower prices over time. So 333 00:16:31,160 --> 00:16:32,720 Speaker 3: we got rid of that and we put it into 334 00:16:32,760 --> 00:16:35,720 Speaker 3: social housing provision because our viewers, when the waitlist is 335 00:16:35,760 --> 00:16:38,360 Speaker 3: twenty thousand strong for social housing and you've got people 336 00:16:38,400 --> 00:16:40,960 Speaker 3: living in emergency housing, it's a better use of Crown 337 00:16:41,080 --> 00:16:43,200 Speaker 3: resource to fund social housing. 338 00:16:43,280 --> 00:16:45,200 Speaker 2: So we did that. There was quite a tough call. 339 00:16:45,320 --> 00:16:48,160 Speaker 3: Not everyone agreed with it, and I can appreciate that 340 00:16:48,200 --> 00:16:54,800 Speaker 3: people don't necessarily like that. You know that there's lots 341 00:16:54,840 --> 00:16:57,520 Speaker 3: of things you can do and lots of different you know, 342 00:16:57,600 --> 00:17:01,920 Speaker 3: sort of solutions, you know, potential solutions. I just come 343 00:17:01,960 --> 00:17:05,840 Speaker 3: back to the fundamental point, which is driving down land price, 344 00:17:06,040 --> 00:17:09,840 Speaker 3: driving down the cost to build, freeing up planning restrictions, 345 00:17:10,520 --> 00:17:13,600 Speaker 3: making it easier to build over time will reduce the 346 00:17:13,600 --> 00:17:17,680 Speaker 3: cost of housing. Orklamuencry Plan as an example where that 347 00:17:17,840 --> 00:17:21,280 Speaker 3: is taking effect. But you know, over time, I'm really 348 00:17:21,280 --> 00:17:24,159 Speaker 3: confident the economic evidence is on our side that we are. 349 00:17:24,000 --> 00:17:28,200 Speaker 2: Doing the right thing. Social housing. 350 00:17:28,880 --> 00:17:31,000 Speaker 3: You know, we've got a whole piece of work to 351 00:17:31,040 --> 00:17:33,520 Speaker 3: get kind of oil, which is the government owned housing 352 00:17:33,560 --> 00:17:36,000 Speaker 3: corporation focused on its costs. 353 00:17:36,800 --> 00:17:39,200 Speaker 1: I mean, it makes complete sense right that if you 354 00:17:39,200 --> 00:17:41,080 Speaker 1: can play a house for twenty or thirty thousand dollars 355 00:17:41,160 --> 00:17:45,159 Speaker 1: less or more, it's better than receiving the grants. If 356 00:17:45,160 --> 00:17:47,760 Speaker 1: that can be achieved, I think there will be a 357 00:17:47,800 --> 00:17:48,560 Speaker 1: fantastic outcome. 358 00:17:48,680 --> 00:17:50,760 Speaker 3: Yeah, there's a range of things we're looking at, like 359 00:17:50,800 --> 00:17:54,359 Speaker 3: progressive home ownership and what's called shared equity. You know, 360 00:17:54,400 --> 00:17:56,880 Speaker 3: the current government, the last government sorry set up set 361 00:17:56,960 --> 00:18:00,840 Speaker 3: up a whole range of different programs there. We are 362 00:18:01,680 --> 00:18:04,119 Speaker 3: we're having a good look at those. They are quite 363 00:18:04,119 --> 00:18:08,760 Speaker 3: expensive and you know they don't they're not at scale, 364 00:18:08,960 --> 00:18:11,920 Speaker 3: So we're having we're having a look at them and 365 00:18:12,280 --> 00:18:15,360 Speaker 3: seeing what ones work and what ones don't. So not 366 00:18:15,359 --> 00:18:19,400 Speaker 3: not closing the door on those kind of options. But yeah, 367 00:18:19,440 --> 00:18:22,199 Speaker 3: the absolute fundamental thrust is to is to sort out 368 00:18:22,200 --> 00:18:23,040 Speaker 3: the planning system. 369 00:18:23,160 --> 00:18:23,359 Speaker 2: You know. 370 00:18:23,400 --> 00:18:25,200 Speaker 1: On the other side, we've got key we save any 371 00:18:25,320 --> 00:18:28,280 Speaker 1: thoughts on how that could be used in in any 372 00:18:28,280 --> 00:18:30,280 Speaker 1: way with regards to exalerating that process to home. 373 00:18:30,640 --> 00:18:32,240 Speaker 3: Yeah, so we preserved the ability to do that. We 374 00:18:32,280 --> 00:18:33,800 Speaker 3: got rid of the first time grant, but preserved the 375 00:18:33,800 --> 00:18:37,080 Speaker 3: ability for people to use keV sabers to withdraw and 376 00:18:37,560 --> 00:18:39,159 Speaker 3: not intending to change that. 377 00:18:39,240 --> 00:18:39,560 Speaker 2: I mean not. 378 00:18:39,600 --> 00:18:41,200 Speaker 3: You know, I saved a bunch of money in my 379 00:18:41,240 --> 00:18:43,000 Speaker 3: own KEP saver back in the day and withdrew it 380 00:18:43,480 --> 00:18:45,840 Speaker 3: all of it basically and order to get into my 381 00:18:45,880 --> 00:18:48,760 Speaker 3: first time So we're you know, we're of got an 382 00:18:48,760 --> 00:18:52,240 Speaker 3: open mind and relation relation to that. Keep savers are 383 00:18:52,240 --> 00:18:54,399 Speaker 3: really important savings vehicle for a lot of a lot 384 00:18:54,440 --> 00:18:58,359 Speaker 3: of New Zealanders and really growing strongly. So don't have 385 00:18:58,400 --> 00:19:02,320 Speaker 3: any fixed pole scene in relation to changes there, but 386 00:19:02,440 --> 00:19:04,280 Speaker 3: an open mind as to what we can do. 387 00:19:04,600 --> 00:19:07,119 Speaker 1: Final question, because we've got a bunch of vestors and 388 00:19:07,200 --> 00:19:09,240 Speaker 1: whilst I've touched on before that I do not see 389 00:19:09,240 --> 00:19:13,359 Speaker 1: myself as a retail investor into residential property going forward, 390 00:19:13,400 --> 00:19:16,280 Speaker 1: like I do like the idea of investing into funds 391 00:19:16,280 --> 00:19:19,880 Speaker 1: and that type of thing, and where I think all 392 00:19:19,880 --> 00:19:22,040 Speaker 1: we have spoken before about the idea of an housing 393 00:19:22,080 --> 00:19:24,040 Speaker 1: fund to help people into first homes and stuff from 394 00:19:24,040 --> 00:19:27,679 Speaker 1: shares is, but the economics are hard to make that 395 00:19:27,880 --> 00:19:30,320 Speaker 1: stack up. You sort of have this basically, where we 396 00:19:30,359 --> 00:19:33,679 Speaker 1: find the gap is between the deposit need, which effectively 397 00:19:33,760 --> 00:19:37,640 Speaker 1: most residential incomes cover your mortgage, which is normally sixty 398 00:19:37,840 --> 00:19:40,280 Speaker 1: ish percent of whatever that residential property is. Hence the 399 00:19:40,320 --> 00:19:42,520 Speaker 1: mass work as soon as you add that forty percent. 400 00:19:42,640 --> 00:19:48,359 Speaker 1: So you've touched on the shared equat Sorry, yeah, the 401 00:19:48,359 --> 00:19:51,000 Speaker 1: shared equity and those types of things going forward. But 402 00:19:51,440 --> 00:19:54,280 Speaker 1: interested in how you see the likes of you know, 403 00:19:54,359 --> 00:19:58,000 Speaker 1: retail investors or shareholders and stuff, and key we see 404 00:19:58,040 --> 00:20:01,680 Speaker 1: for members their part play or any part in your 405 00:20:01,720 --> 00:20:02,480 Speaker 1: plans going forward. 406 00:20:02,600 --> 00:20:04,560 Speaker 3: Yeah, I mean we've sort of got an open mind 407 00:20:04,560 --> 00:20:07,359 Speaker 3: and all that stuff, and you know, I'm interested in 408 00:20:07,400 --> 00:20:13,920 Speaker 3: all any ideas to to do that. So we we've 409 00:20:13,960 --> 00:20:15,960 Speaker 3: got a very open mind to some of these things. 410 00:20:16,000 --> 00:20:18,040 Speaker 3: And once you sort of step back a bit and say, 411 00:20:18,560 --> 00:20:22,800 Speaker 3: you know, we can we can create different vehicles or 412 00:20:22,840 --> 00:20:26,320 Speaker 3: look at regulatory change in order to make those easier, 413 00:20:26,960 --> 00:20:30,800 Speaker 3: you know, we're up for those discussions, very very keen 414 00:20:30,840 --> 00:20:34,040 Speaker 3: to talk about it. You know, we've just got to 415 00:20:34,080 --> 00:20:37,359 Speaker 3: get housing under control in New Zealand. It's very important 416 00:20:37,400 --> 00:20:40,880 Speaker 3: for a whole generation or two of young New Zealanders 417 00:20:40,960 --> 00:20:43,160 Speaker 3: and it's and it's very important for the wider economy, 418 00:20:43,880 --> 00:20:45,720 Speaker 3: which would be my take home point. 419 00:20:46,720 --> 00:20:48,920 Speaker 1: Nice Well, thanks so much for your time, Thank you 420 00:20:49,600 --> 00:20:52,240 Speaker 1: work so Thanks so much again to the Minister for 421 00:20:52,320 --> 00:20:54,800 Speaker 1: joining us, and thanks everyone for tuning in. You can 422 00:20:54,800 --> 00:20:57,800 Speaker 1: watch Shared Lunch on YouTube or follow the podcast on Apple, 423 00:20:57,880 --> 00:21:01,280 Speaker 1: Spotify or wherever you get your podcast. Leave us rating 424 00:21:01,280 --> 00:21:03,000 Speaker 1: in a comment about what you'd like to hear about 425 00:21:03,040 --> 00:21:15,120 Speaker 1: next Karko. What if I told you it's easier than 426 00:21:15,200 --> 00:21:18,119 Speaker 1: ever to earn interest on your spear cash and that 427 00:21:18,240 --> 00:21:20,720 Speaker 1: you can invest your keV saver balance into New Zealand 428 00:21:20,720 --> 00:21:24,880 Speaker 1: listened companies too, Well, now you can, right alongside your 429 00:21:24,880 --> 00:21:29,120 Speaker 3: Investment portfolio, SHARE's ease for the money you've got big 430 00:21:29,160 --> 00:21:29,679 Speaker 3: plans for