by Sally Lindsay
The critical parts of the plan include:
There are about 600,000 rental properties across the country, with the private sector providing the overwhelming majority, at about 510,000 or 85% of rental housing. The Government provides about 72,000 rental properties or 12 % of the total.
There are no precise figures on the size of the rental economy – but the federation says using turnover (in the form of rent) as a guide then it is worth in excess of $15 billion a year.
While many believe most residential rental properties are held by large-scale landlords, a 2015 NZPIF survey shows 75.8% of residential landlords own just one rental property. Just 0.1% of all private landlords own 10 or more properties.
While the federation is an industry body representing rental property owners, vice-president Peter Lewis says it must also consider the needs of tenants.
In addition to higher rental prices, which Trade Me figures released last week show are rising rapidly, there are more than 25,000 families on the state housing waiting list and taxpayers are spending $1 million every day on emergency and transitional housing. “This wouldn’t happen in a well-functioning rental system.”
The federation says a large part of the rental crisis has been caused by measures to fix the housing crisis. The strategy of higher costs and taxes to reduce investment in rental property was meant to at least stabilise house prices, however this has clearly not worked with property prices having increased at alarming rates
What has occurred, says the federation is wide-spread rental property shortages, higher rental prices and poorer outcomes for tenants.
It says there are a number of challenges facing the rental property industry in New Zealand:
The federation is proposing a new tenancy option be developed for tenants who want long term tenure security and landlords who are willing to provide it. The suggested terms of the new tenancy option are:
This tenancy will appeal to tenants who want a rental that is more like their own property while providing compensation to landlord's for giving up their ability to terminate the tenancy.
To be clear, says the federation, not all of the Government’s actions have created problems. Most aspects of the Healthy Homes legislation have been good and are leading to improvements in the rental stocks. Likewise, most of the changes to the Residential Tenancies Act have appropriately improved conditions for tenants.
However, there are some changes to the rental industry that while intending to improve opportunities for first home buyers, have made renting worse for tenants, says the federation. These include removing mortgage interest as a tax deduction, ring fencing and extending the Brightline test. “These policies do not improve tenants’ living standards, but they have made renting harder to achieve and more expensive,” says Lewis.
The federation believes the Government needs to acknowledge there is a rental crisis and that some of its well-intentioned solutions to housing problems have caused it and continue to make the situation worse.”
Lewis says the federation’s plan will improve the living standards of tenants based on five core principles in providing stable and better homes, lower costs to enable lower rental prices, more rental properties to meet existing and future demand and facilitating improved access to justice for both tenants and landlords. The fifth principle is creating closer communities for the benefit of all New Zealanders.
« Skyrocketing rents matching record inflation | Massive housing shortage turning but rental crisis looming » |
Special Offers
Sign In to add your comment
© Copyright 1997-2025 Tarawera Publishing Ltd. All Rights Reserved
We need more rental housing so let encourage it. The private sector can solve the current housing crisis with alittle encouragement from the Government, especially now councils are allowing more dwellings per site. It needs no hand outs, just no disincentives.