Measures are meant to be being taken to address this. There are special housing areas in Auckland where the process is streamlined, but even there we're not seeing much actual construction happening.
The Government is looking at this through its Resource Management Act (RMA) reforms, which will explicitly recognise the need for affordable housing. A report commissioned by the Treasury said the RMA as it stands was adding $30,000 to the cost of the average apartment and $15,000 to the cost of the average home.
Another issue worth addressing is that of tax. Buy a second-hand house and, in almost all cases, you won't pay tax. But when you buy a new one you have to pay an extra 15 per cent in GST. This immediately adds a considerable amount to the buyer's mortgage and pushes up the prices of existing homes around it. If you buy a new $600,000 house you pay $90,000 just in GST.
Property commentator Olly Newland has suggested first-home buyers get a rebate for the GST they pay on new builds, and that is something we can't afford not to explore further. If we're serious about more affordable housing we need to start taking some real action. With migration booming, house prices will continue to be an issue until supply is sorted out. Houses need to be built and it's in everyone's interests for families to be able to afford good, healthy homes to live in.
Jeremy Tauri is an associate at Plus Chartered Accountants.