Categories: blogKatonah

Housing need goes beyond role of politics | Katonah NY Real Estate

Expand

Photo / APN

The competition for scarce rental housing in Auckland has been intense for several years and appears to be getting worse.

This week we have reported the lengths that accommodation seekers are having to go to in the hope of impressing an owner or letting agent. Being well-presented and employed is just the beginning.

Hopeful tenants are sending full CVs and photographs in advance of the viewing, when they are likely to be in a crowd of hopefuls, all “explaining your professional job and how you are hardly ever home and just want a clean and tidy place”, as one flat-hunter told us.

They are, of course, making offers above the stated rent. They have bid up the average weekly rent for a three-bedroom home in Auckland to $500, compared with $350 in the country overall. Many of these people are obviously in a position to buy a home but, as we reported yesterday, there is a shortage of houses offered for sale and that also is getting worse.

Normally in these circumstances the demand would bid up the price of houses too but that is not happening. Auckland house prices went so high during the last property boom that they far exceeded sensible affordability levels as a proportion of incomes.

In the four years since the bubble burst, house prices in this country have dropped only 4.4 per cent.

In December the Economist calculated that New Zealand homes are overvalued by 25 per cent, putting it in the company of Australia, Canada, Britain and much of western Europe where house prices have not plummeted as they did in the United States.

The financial magazine said householders in these countries still carried extremely high debt and it believed the “bursting of the housing bubble is only half-way through”.

Four years seems a long time to hold an investment home if it has been highly geared with debt for a quick capital gain. Doubtless rent increases have helped sustain the property in the meantime but clearly New Zealand investors are not as vulnerable to debt as the Economist supposed.

First-home seekers waiting for prices to collapse might wait a long time.

The Real Estate Institute’s index for Auckland was back at its 2007 peak in December and more houses were sold than in any December since the crash.

But the excess of demand over supply remains so great that agents are listing buyers rather than sellers and cold-calling property owners in an attempt to find stock.

The only practical answer to high rents and unaffordable prices is to increase the supply of new houses.

If young adults today are to aspire to home ownership as their parents could, the building industry has to be expanded and governments must ensure that nothing stands in the way of construction of the type of houses these people want.

Their need is too important to be fodder for a political argument between land developers and city planners as to whether urban limits or land banking are aggravating the housing shortage.

Nor should their plight be made an argument for the “compact city” plan, as Auckland’s mayor has claimed.

Some home-seekers might like the high-density developments the Auckland Council wants to encourage in places well served by public transport, others might have other plans.

The Productivity Commission has recently reported on the limited capacity of the country’s building industry and the high costs of materials, problems that will be exacerbated by the scale of reconstruction needed in Christchurch eventually.

But with a concerted effort by planners, bankers, building companies and council consents, the supply of sought-after houses could surely be improved.

It would be a stimulant for the rest of the economy too.

‘); var intLoop = 1; var adCommentId = 0; for(var i=page_index*items_per_page;i 1) numlikephrase = ‘ likes’; if(numlikes == 0) numlikephrase = ‘ likes’; // Build the block quotes. var blockQuotes = $(‘
‘); strParent1 = $(‘
‘); strParent2 = $(‘
‘); if(arrData[i].parent_comment_id_1 > 0) { strParent1 = $(‘\

\

\
‘+arrData[i].parent_comment_nick_name_1+’
‘+arrData[i].parent_comment_1+’

\

\

\

\

\ ‘); } if(arrData[i].parent_comment_id_2 > 0) { strParent2 = $(‘\

\

\
‘+arrData[i].parent_comment_nick_name_2+’
‘+arrData[i].parent_comment_2+’

\

\

\

\

\ ‘); } if(arrData[i].parent_comment_id_2 > 0) strParent1.prepend(strParent2); blockQuotes.append(strParent1); // insertion of ad var the_first_part = ”; var the_last_part = ”; var arrString = published_comment.split(“

“); if(arrString.length == 1){ the_first_part = published_comment; the_last_part = ”; } else { arrFirstParts = arrString.splice(0,arrString.length-1, 1); the_first_part = arrFirstParts.join(“

“); the_last_part = arrString[arrString.length-1]; } if(intLoop == 3){ adIncrement ++; adNum = comment_id; } var replyStr = ”; if(blnAcceptingComments){ replyStr = ‘Reply‘; } // Build the actual comment $(‘

  • \
    \
    \ \ ‘+nick_name+’\ (‘+city+’)\

    \

    ‘+dateStamp+’

    \

    \

    ‘ + blockQuotes.html() +’\

    ‘+the_first_part+’

    \

    \

    ‘+the_last_part+’

    \

    \

    \

      \
    1. ‘ + replyStr + ‘
    2. \

      \

    3. Report
    4. \

    \

    \

  • ‘).appendTo(commentsDisplay); intLoop ++; } if(intLoop

    “).hide(); $p.append($div); $.getJSON(reportFormURL, function(data){ $div.html(data[‘HTML’]); $div.find(‘textarea’).limit(1200, $div.find(‘.charCounter > span’)); $div.slideDown(‘slow’); }); } else { // Toggle the existing form. $p.find(‘.reportComment’).slideToggle(‘slow’); } }; function submitReportForm(id) { var subFunc = function(id) { var text = $(‘#comment’+id).find(‘[name=reporttext]’).val(); $.jsonp({ url: thisDynamicDomain + ‘/comments/report-comment-form.cfm?callback=?’, data: {token:$.cookie(‘NZH_SESSIONTOKEN’), comment_id: id, reporttext: text}, type: ‘get’, cache: false, success:function(data){ var f = $(‘#comment’+id).find(‘.reportComment’).slideUp(‘slow’, function(){ f.html(data[‘HTML’]); f.find(‘textarea’).limit(1200, f.find(‘.charCounter > span’)); f.slideDown(‘slow’); }); } }); }; if(comment_js_loaded) { sessionWrapper(subFunc,id); } else { $.getScript(thisDynamicDomain + ‘/comments/comments.js’,function(){ sessionWrapper(subFunc, id); }, true); } }; // When document has loaded, initialize pagination and form $(document).ready(function(){ // Bind some events to the ordering links. $(“#commentsOrdering li a”).click(function(){ // Remove active from all. $(“#commentsOrdering li a”).each(function(){ $(this).removeClass(“active”); }); // Add active to this one. $(this).addClass(“active”); }); loadJSON(); }); // legacy JS, is it needed? var comment_js_loaded = false;

  • comments
    order by
  • This post was last modified on %s = human-readable time difference 10:02 am

    Robert Paul

    Robert is a realtor in Bedford NY. He has been successfully working with buyers and sellers for years. His local area of expertise includes Bedford, Pound Ridge, Armonk, Lewisboro, Chappaqua and Katonah. When you have a local real estate question please call 914-325-5758.

    Recent Posts

    Out of Sevice with brain injury since November.

    Just back out of hospital in early March for home recovery. Therapist coming today.

    2 years ago

    Existing home sales down 28% | Katonah Real Estate

    Sales fell 5.9% from September and 28.4% from one year ago.

    2 years ago

    Single-Family Housing Contraction Continues | Bedford Hills Real Estate

    Housing starts decreased 4.2% to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1.43 million units in…

    2 years ago

    Closed Median Sale Price in Hudson Valley/NYC Markets Declined by 2.50% in October | Bedford Real Estate

    OneKey MLS reported a regional closed median sale price of $585,000, representing a 2.50% decrease…

    2 years ago

    Building Materials Prices Decline for Second Consecutive Month | Pound Ridge Real Estate

    The prices of building materials decreased 0.2% in October

    2 years ago

    Mortgage rates drop with inflation drop | Bedford Corners Real Estate

    Mortgage rates went from 7.37% yesterday to 6.67% as of this writing.

    2 years ago

    This website uses cookies.