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Just 724 new apartments were built last year, down from around 4000 previously

brisbanenow.online /lord-mayor-admits-failure-on-housing-in-brisbane/

Disclaimer: "Brisbane Now" is run by the Labor Party Brisbane City Council team. It is pretty explicitly biased in their favour.

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  • Obvious bias notwithstanding, I do think it's interesting. The LNP-lead Council has just reduced infrastructure charges on a number of apartment developments. The LNP claim that the excessive cost of building is the reason developers are not building, and that by reducing the charges drastically, they'll be able to build more.

    I actually haven't seen much addressing this from Labor. But the Greens have heavily criticised this move, saying that the infrastructure charges are necessary to help fund important Council initiatives, like repairing roads, operating buses, and building bike paths. Next time your local councillor says they can't do something because they don't have the funds, you should remember this moment, the Greens say.

    It's worth noting that in the past, the LNP has mentioned that infrastructure charges are capped by the State Government, and at least hinted that they would like to charge more if they could. It's very odd (if you try to assume good-faith) that at one point they would be lambasting their inability to charge more, and then later turning around and slashing the charges for private developments by as much as 75%.

    The opposing viewpoint is that the reason apartment building is slowed is because developers are incentivised to maximise profit, and thus they are disincentivised from building too many apartments at once, creating an artificial scarcity and keeping home prices high. Developers are land-banking to the detriment of society as a whole.

    There are multiple ways of countering the land-banking, if indeed that is the cause of the problem. One solution I've seen either the Greens or people who are Greens-aligned (I can't remember which) suggest is a levy on any land where a project has received DA approval if the build has not started after a certain amount of time.

    Another more free-market approach would be to reduce the need for these small number of high-profile developers capable of building large apartment buildings, by creating a wide-spread change to allow medium density development everywhere. Medium-density townhouses and small apartments are far more accessible to individuals and smaller-time developers, which would move the housing market away from the oligopoly that it is currently and more towards perfect competition, making it harder for that land-banking to occur. (In addition to all the other societal benefits of medium-density development compared to either low-density or high-density.)