News | Politics
13 Feb 2025 16:56
NZCity News
NZCity CalculatorReturn to NZCity

  • Start Page
  • Personalise
  • Sport
  • Weather
  • Finance
  • Shopping
  • Jobs
  • Horoscopes
  • Lotto Results
  • Photo Gallery
  • Site Gallery
  • TVNow
  • Dating
  • SearchNZ
  • NZSearch
  • Crime.co.nz
  • RugbyLeague
  • Make Home
  • About NZCity
  • Contact NZCity
  • Your Privacy
  • Advertising
  • Login
  • Join for Free

  •   Home > News > Politics

    To achieve real growth, the NZ government needs to relax the rules around housing

    New Zealanders don’t need to give up their housing dreams in order to get business moving. Instead, making homes cheaper to build will free up money for investment.

    James Graham, Senior Lecturer in Economics, University of Sydney
    The Conversation


    New Zealand Parliament
    New Zealand Parliament

    Prime Minister Christopher Luxon wants New Zealand to “go for growth”.

    But his plan, focused on reforming foreign investment, planning and competition laws, as well as boosting the tourism and mining sectors, is hampered by a fundamental reality of New Zealand’s economy: much of the country’s capital is tied up in unproductive (and expensive) housing.

    While this issue is not new, with New Zealand’s economy once described as “a housing market with bits tacked on”, the solution may lie in making housing more readily available through deregulation and policy reform. This would free up capital for drivers of growth such as infrastructure and business investment.


    Pie chart of household capital allocation.
    Household capital allocation March, 2021. Data source: RBNZ Household Balance Sheet. Author provided

    The temptation of housing

    Rapidly growing house prices over the past two decades have provided strong incentives to direct investment to the housing market.

    On average, the price of a typical house has grown by around 8% per year, far outpacing household income growth. For example, in 2005 the median house price was roughly five times the average household income. By the middle of the pandemic house values had ballooned to nine times the average income.

    Soaring prices have made residential investment extremely profitable for a long time. This means savings and investments have tended to flow into residential property rather than other productive sectors of the economy.

    Constraints on housing supply

    The problem is that in recent decades additional residential investment has not led to a substantial increase in new homes.

    Local and central government rules and regulations have long hampered the construction of new houses. Instead, more investment in real estate has generally led to even higher prices.

    As concerning as this is, it does not mean investments in housing have been misplaced. Rather, high prices and profits are what the market required in order to encourage those willing to build (few that there are) despite the costs, delays and uncertainties associated with bureaucratic battles with councils, planners and local NIMBY groups.

    Banning property speculation might have kept prices down and reallocated investment to other productive uses. But in the absence of those speculators, the supply constraints would not have been any looser. Lower prices mean lower returns over building costs, leading to even fewer houses built.

    Shifting capital out of the housing market in this way would not have benefited the country – we might have produced more and goods and services but fewer homes in which to live.

    Chirstopher Luxon speaks in parliament.
    Christopher Luxon is pushing forward his plan for growth focused on reforming foreign investment, planning and competition laws, as well as boosting the tourism and mining sectors. Hagen Hopkins/Getty Images

    Reforming housing supply

    Fortunately, New Zealand has made meaningful progress on housing supply recently. For example, Auckland and Lower Hutt changed zoning laws in the 2010s making it easier to build, and Wellington City has recently followed suit.

    These changes have led to local construction booms and, crucially, lower house prices and rents.

    More recently, central governments of both stripes introduced policies like the National Policy Statement on Urban Development, Medium Density Residential Standards, and housing growth targets for local councils.

    These reforms make it easier to build, reduce house prices and mean less investment capital is required for each new house built. So these policies have the dual benefit of improving housing affordability and freeing up capital for other productive sectors of the economy.

    As prices come down, New Zealanders will no longer need to pour nine times their income into a home.

    That will free up funds for investments in new bridges and tunnels, small businesses, and exciting new startups that will help drive innovation and generate the long-run growth we seek.

    New Zealand need not give up its housing dreams in order to get business moving. Rather, it can do both.

    All that requires is for local and central government to continue to let people build the housing they want so that we can free up the capital our infrastructure and businesses need.

    The Conversation

    James Graham has received research funding from the Australian Housing and Urban Research Institute and is a member of Sydney YIMBY.

    This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license.
    © 2025 TheConversation, NZCity

     Other Politics News
     13 Feb: Taiwan's government accused of failing victims trapped in scam compounds
     13 Feb: A lower-than-forecast rates increase is on the cards for Christchurch
     13 Feb: Sealord says the current Fisheries Act regulations are no longer fit for purpose
     13 Feb: Is Elon Musk taking over the US government? Here’s how ‘state capture’ works – and why we should be concerned
     13 Feb: How much does scientific progress cost? Without government dollars for research infrastructure, breakthroughs become improbable
     12 Feb: China-backed APT40 hacking group blamed for cyber attacks on Samoa
     12 Feb: Damning report calls on all governments to 'urgently' assist Stolen Generations and their families
     Top Stories

    RUGBY RUGBY
    All Black Caleb Clarke continues to ponder his future with New Zealand Rugby More...


    BUSINESS BUSINESS
    A 103-million-dollar decline in retail spending last month may be a sign of things to come More...



     Today's News

    International:
    Truck cabin found in giant Japanese sinkhole as rescuers hunt for driver 16:47

    Entertainment:
    Prince Harry has shown his five-year-old son footage of his late mother, Princess Diana, walking through a minefield 16:42

    Politics:
    Taiwan's government accused of failing victims trapped in scam compounds 16:37

    International:
    India's 'anti-corruption champion' loses Delhi election as $6m reno of official residence surfaces 16:27

    Health & Safety:
    A woman from Mangawhai with life-threatening dehydration, was shocked to find she had the Victorian-era disease, cholera 16:17

    Entertainment:
    Charlie Puth has begged Kanye West to "stop" after he started selling a T-shirt featuring a swastika 16:12

    Rugby League:
    Grim news for Warriors fans on winger Dallin Watene-Zelezniak 16:07

    National:
    Indigenous knowledge merges with science to protect people from fish poisoning in Vanuatu 16:07

    Entertainment:
    New York Dolls frontman David Johansen is battling stage 4 cancer 15:42

    Entertainment:
    Bradley Cooper has recalled his joy over going to see the Philadelphia Eagles with his father 15:12


     News Search






    Power Search


    © 2025 New Zealand City Ltd