this post was submitted on 20 Jul 2023
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My first instinct is "yes" but then I thought about it and I think it's just going to exacerbate the short-stay problem unless combined with other measures.

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[–] shermozle@lemmy.sdf.org 3 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Remove negative gearing and the capital gains tax concessions then let's talk other measures.

[–] DogMuffins@discuss.tchncs.de 0 points 1 year ago

This.

This is the easiest to administrate and provides the biggest benefit. This is the low hanging fruit.

However, after Labors bloodbath when taking it to the election in... 2017 (?) it's a political non-starter.

[–] Taleya@aussie.zone 1 points 1 year ago

Easy fix then, set the criteria for not getting taxed to a formal leasing agreement.

[–] Anonbal185@aussie.zone 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Minimum density to housing.

1km from minor train station, light rail or BRT should have a building height of 50m+ to 100m

Major stations with express services minimum 100m to 150m

Metro 150m+

Problem 2 is immigration just comes to NSW and Victoria. Have different citizenship requirements depending on where someone is living.

For example something like 10 years minimum for citizenship if you've worked or lived in Sydney or Melbourne but 5 years if you haven't.

For example Spain has different citizenship requirements depending on where you're born. If you're born in Portugal, Andorra or any of their ex colonies it's only 2 years residence to get citizenship for everyone else it's 10 years.

We could apply the same principle - citizenship takes 5 times longer if you reside or have resided in Sydney or Melbourne. This will reduce the immigration demand on these two cities.

[–] Zagorath@aussie.zone 1 points 1 year ago

More density is great, but you're taking it to some rather ridiculous extremes. 1 km is a really large radius.

Looking at Wooloowin Station in Brisbane, 1 km takes you to the opposite side of Lutwyche Rd in the west and Sandgate Rd in the east, which are areas that are very obviously not connected in terms of locality to Wooloowin Station.

The guideline for good accessibility is usually a 400 m walk to public transportation, and I think that means it's also a good guideline for where the increased density should be located around stations. (It's a bit borderline on account of the walking distance being the indirect route taken on the ground, while the radius is a simple "as the crow flies" distance, but it's a decent guideline anyway.)

50 m tall is, according to this report from the city of Victoria in Canada, 17 storeys. That would make 100 34 storeys and 150 m+ a minimum of 51 storeys. That's huge.

But we can achieve much greater density on the whole without going to such extremes. So-called "gentle density".

Council’s current approach has been “avoid changing anything at all, but when we do change, push for the tallest towers we possibly can get away with”. My policy would be almost the opposite of that. I would make widespread sweeping changes across the entire city, but the scale of those changes would be fairly small. I'm using Brisbane City Council terminology because that's what I'm familiar with, but similar concepts should apply:

I would eliminate all LDR and CR1 zones entirely and replace them with LMR3 and CR2, respectively. LDR allows only single-family separated homes. LMR2 allows 2–3 storey apartments and townhouses, as well as granny flats and duplexes, while not outlawing single-family separated homes. Then, I would make everywhere within a 400 m radius of a train station HDR1 (with the caveat that my version of HDR1 would still permit townhouses and duplexes like the current LDMR and MDR do, but which current HDR does not, while still not permitting single-family separated homes). Between 400 and 1000 m of a train station would be MDR. MDR is 5 storeys, HDR1 is 8 storeys. HDR2 (15 storeys) could be used for major important train stations, but really I don't know if I want to see anything more than 8 storeys further out from the CBD than about 5 km.

But that first step is really the most important. You could get a doubling or more of available density just by removing all the low density and replacing it with a gentle sort of medium density, with the higher density areas sort of like the spice on top.

[–] lasagna@programming.dev 1 points 1 year ago

I quite liked Wales' approach of taxing second homes significantly more.

A large part of Wales' housing issue comes from English retirees buying up holiday homes. To the point people were accusing the government of discriminating against English people for the tax against properties that aren't main residences.

[–] w2qw@aussie.zone 0 points 1 year ago (1 children)
[–] Nath@aussie.zone 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (2 children)

A flat land tax is a bit rough. Take some 80-year-old pensioner living in a simple house in suburbs. They've lived there for 60 years, only that suburb is now gentrified and a blanket 1% tax on the house is now a $10k/year tax bill they need to come up with (Just making up example of 1% of $1 Million property) just to stay in their own home.

This is a tough problem to figure out. I'm glad it isn't my job. Whatever the solution is, I'm sure it's more complicated that just blanket-taxing land. There'd need to be some exemptions to address this (which wouldn't be that uncommon) and other scenarios I'm too dumb to think of. And whatever exemptions are applied, would naturally lead to people exploiting them as loopholes.

[–] RustyRaven@aussie.zone 1 points 1 year ago (2 children)

I think options to defer payment until sale of the house for people with low incomes would be worthwhile, but considering the massive benefit we give to pensioners who own their own home I don't think it is unreasonable for some of that to be repaid from the sale of the house. If that same pensioner held a similar value of assets in any other form we would expect them to be fully self-funded and they would not see a cent of pension.

[–] Taleya@aussie.zone 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

well, yeah. Because it's the house they actually live in, not shares or stocks.

[–] RustyRaven@aussie.zone 0 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Why does being a house they live in mean it is not also an asset? If someone prefers to rent and save up more money towards their retirement instead of buying a house why should they be penalised? If someone wants to buy an inner city appartment that is worth less and have more money put aside to pay the body corporate fees why should they get less pension than if they have a freestanding house? If someone wants to sell their house, put that money aside while they travel in a van around Australia for a few years and then buy something suitable when it is time to settle down again, why should they lose their pension compared to someone who leaves the house mostly empty while they travel so it doesn't count as an asset?

We definitely should have some consideration for the fact that this is someone's house and they shouldn't lose it because of unrealised capital gains, but we also shouldn't be creating a two-tier system which also ties people in to keeping a house which may not be suitable for them any more.

[–] Taleya@aussie.zone 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Because the value is not immediately and readily accessible without uprooting their entire life.

Tax the shit outta the sale, sure but basically penalising someone for living in their own house opens up a lot of very bad doors.

[–] RustyRaven@aussie.zone 1 points 1 year ago

That's exacty what I'm arguing. A land tax which is able to be put off until the sale where people have low incomes. That would not penalise anyone, it just means some of the windfall gains from rising property prices go towards paying taxes rather than being a freebie to be passed on to the next generation as inheretance.

[–] Nath@aussie.zone 0 points 1 year ago (1 children)

I'm no expert in this stuff, I shouldn't be getting to involved in a discussion on the matter. I don't entirely disagree with you, but houses are a bit different (and the ATO recognises this fact). As everyone is very (very) aware: 60 years ago, houses did not cost $1 Million. The simple 3x1 on a quarter acre was purchased for something like $30k. The owner paid if off diligently, paid all taxes owed from income through the years and the welfare system in place at the time assured citizens that there would be a pension at the end of their working life.

It is not this individual's fault that most of the old houses in the street are long gone, that all those blocks were subdivided and that a quarter acre in Carlton North these days is worth $1 Million. They've never been rich. They don't have any liquid wealth.

On the flip side, I agree that wealthy people pay a far smaller proportion of their income in tax than us mere mortals pay. Getting them to pay a similar proportion of tax is desirable. I'd love a solution to this problem. But, I don't want that solution to hurt thousands of people in the spirit of being 'fair'.

[–] RustyRaven@aussie.zone 0 points 1 year ago (1 children)

So what is your argument here, that people who got asset rich through no effort of their own should have that wealth protected so their kids can inherit as much as possible? Is it ok to tax someone if they worked hard to earn the money to buy a $1 million dollar home today, but if you got lucky in the past you should be tax exempt? Tying up your assets in your home already has some major tax benefits - it is exempt from capital gains tax, and barely counts towards the age pension.

Yes there need to be corresponding changes to allow for things like putting off the tax until the home is sold, but I don't think we should rule out changes to the tax system because your hypothetical home owner didn't intend to earn 970,000 profit when they bought their home. Perhaps we could also make a change so that this hypothetical pensioner could sell their quarter acre block and move into somewhere smaller that they can more easily maintain, freeing up some of that money so they can actually spend it, without losing most/all of their pension because the same wealth is now "liquid wealth".

[–] Nath@aussie.zone 1 points 1 year ago

My argument is merely that a flat land tax is not as fair as it sounds on the face of it. There are issues with it - and if the intent is to replace stamp duty with a land tax, that's a total non-starter for most of the country: since stamp duty has been privatised.

I'm certainly not qualified to produce a solution to the problem.

[–] Getawombatupya@aussie.zone 0 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Fuck a flat land tax idea. On top of GST, Income Tax, Rates and interest (plus stamp duty), it's just a money grab.

[–] w2qw@aussie.zone 0 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (1 children)

I mean like do you have an alternative to taxes? The whole point of this is you'd pay less after the switch.

[–] Getawombatupya@aussie.zone 1 points 1 year ago

Honestly, I've been on this rock long enough to know a new tax goes on the the rest don't come off.

[–] abhibeckert@lemmy.world 0 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (1 children)

It should be based on bedrooms.

A four bedroom house should have a minimum three people living there as their principle place of residence. The address on their drivers license, electoral roll, school encirclement, etc. If you have less people, you should pay... I dunno, $40k per year in tax?

The government can use that $40k per house in tax revenue to buy all the homes people are suddenly going to want to sell, and put them on the rental market. In some parts of Europe half of all rentals are owned by the government. It's a system that works well. It also makes town planning easier - often homes need to be demolished in order to build infrastructure for example. The government can do that if it owns a suitable residence with a lease that's ending soon.

[–] Shilkanni@aussie.zone 1 points 1 year ago

Doesn't this encourage knocking down walls, making bigger bedrooms, reclassifying rooms as non-bedroom, and knockdown rebuilds.

[–] TheHolm@aussie.zone -1 points 1 year ago (3 children)

We just should stop shovelling people into cities. Lots of people can work remotely and one who can't will follow one who can. Just tax companies for having office unless they do production. Yeh, yes it will crash prices in CBD, so not going to happen.

[–] Zagorath@aussie.zone 1 points 1 year ago (2 children)

Cities are still good even if you don't need to commute into work. Having higher density means people can walk or cycle to visit friends, or when going to social and sporting clubs. They mean you can get to the shops much more easily, and are more likely to have access to a wide variety of niche stores.

They're better for the environment because they reduce dependency on cars, and reducing the need to drive everywhere is excellent for children and teens who can gain a greater degree of independence when they don't have to be driven everywhere by a parent. And good for health because more passive exercise is amazing as a substitute for driving everywhere, as well as because of the reduction in pollutants in the local air caused by driving.

In short, suggesting people should spread out ad infinitum might be fine when you just look at it in terms of "home" and "work" travel, but in a much broader sense there are huge advantages to keeping people located together.

[–] TheHolm@aussie.zone -1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Honesty I do not believe that many would prefer to live in units where others walking on you head than in a house. Yes you can be forced to live in such condition because unit it is all you can afford while having reasonable commute. Remove that requirements and people will spread. Historically cities were build for mutual protection after that to concentrate work force. It is no longer relevant, they have nothing to offer in modern world. Yes it is cheaper to confine population in cities, but tent camps are even cheaper. to run Cities are not something we should use in the future.

[–] Zagorath@aussie.zone 1 points 1 year ago

I do not believe that many would prefer to live in units where others walking on you head than in a house

Well, then why are children in the Netherlands the happiest in the world?

I find the way you're framing it very interesting, too. "Where others walking on your head". I think it demonstrates a pretty poor understanding of what it's actually like to live in well-built apartments. And it's certainly ignoring the townhouses and duplexes that make for some of the best gentle density.

Yes it is cheaper to confine population in cities…Cities are not something we should use in the future.

Yes, it is. If you want people to be moving out into more sprawling suburbs, or worse, rural living, why not ask them to directly pay for their own infrastructure costs like building and maintaining the roads, sewerage, and electricity, instead of expecting the taxpayers living in more sustainable housing to foot the bill. Not to mention increasing how much we charge for the impact all your increased driving has on the environment, so that it properly prices in the externalities.

Right now we heavily subsidise rural living. And it makes sense, because by and large people who live rural are providing important services like farming, or are in industries supporting those people like local stores and schools. But continuing that huge subsidy in a context where people are moving rural for the hell of it? Lol nah.

[–] hitmyspot@aussie.zone -1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

While I don’t disagree that cities give better access and is better for the environment, I do disagree about the independence for young people. In the city, it is not seen as safe for a young person, like under 10, to walk to their friends house in the same suburb. In the country that would be perfectly normal. I do agree, car transport becomes a necessity for events and meet ups that are further afield. However, that’s also the case in the city. Just no for every event due to better public transport, but our public transport systems are not all covering.

[–] Zagorath@aussie.zone 1 points 1 year ago

You seem to be conflating both the inner city and the current car-dependent sprawling suburbia, and in so doing you're contrasting car-dependent suburbia with rural living. But my entire point is to contrast the difference between low density living (whether it's rural or suburban sprawl) with the higher density that city living offers.

The thing is, when you increase density it becomes a lot easier to put in place better public transport routes. Our current poor transport networks are partly the result of how inefficient it is to deliver public transport to low density environments. When things are closer together, it also puts more things within range to cycle places, which is absolutely perfect for kids and teens. Statistically, kids in the famously dense and cyclable Netherlands are the happiest in the world.

When you've got reasonable density and eyes on the ground, and lack that soulless feeling of large stroads they have to walk or ride along, people feel safer letting their kids walk or ride to go play with friends or get to school or to sports clubs.

[–] veroxii@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago

It's already everywhere. Places like Wollongong and Newcastle have the same housing issues as Sydney. Sometimes even worse. And even further out to places like in the Maitland and Cessnock council areas people can't afford rent anymore. And every new vacancy has hundreds of people showing up.

In fact local people are suffering more as cashed up Sydneysiders are swooping in paying the "cheap" rents which are already double what they were pre covid.

[–] Tavarin@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

We tried that in Canada, housing in small towns just shot up to super expensive as well, and it's now just expensive everywhere.

[–] TheHolm@aussie.zone -1 points 1 year ago

In this case only answer is more houses. And lowering building code, so building for new house does not mean you have to pay mortgage for next 25 years.