Previous estimates of the Christchurch earthquake damage were wildly astray. The $3.05 billion budgeted in May to be the net cost of claims to the Earthquake Commission has risen to $7.07 billion in the commission's latest estimate. The revision makes nonsense of the initial work of assessors, or perhaps it
Editorial: Rethink how best to house quake victims
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The Pyne Gould Corporation building in central Christchurch after the quake. Photo / Simon Baker
If the Government leaves the supply of new land in private hands and lets demand drive up the price as far as it might, it is handing a windfall to private developers and sellers at public expense. It would do better to take on the temporary additional expense of buying land and building houses at values the evacuees could afford.
There is said to be plenty of suitable vacant land near Christchurch that could be made available through Housing New Zealand or the Canterbury Earthquake Recovery Authority. The expense could be recovered from section sales and established communities could be relocated reasonably intact. Many of these residents have forged closer bonds from the ordeal they have shared and state a wish to move as a community. It would be good for the city's recovery if these people could be kept together.
The Government will be reluctant to interfere in a market more than is necessary but one intervention often requires another. Markets are ideal for allocating resources economically when they function freely. When the market is removed from one side of the supply and demand equation, it usually will not function properly on the other side.
The February aftershock, shallow and close to Christchurch, released ground forces larger than any previously recorded in this country. It was probably optimistic to imagine the cost after earthquake insurance would not be much more than $3 billion. In another few months the same may be said of $7 billion. This was the country's worst natural disaster and the financial repercussions are not over yet.