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WSWS : News
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Australia: Public housing being cannibalised
By Mary Beadnell
19 May 2004
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Public housing in Australia is unlikely to survive more than
another decade, according to a recent report produced for the
Australian Housing and Urban Research Institute. The study, prepared
by Mike Berry and Jon Hall from the Royal Melbourne Institute
of Technology, found that state and federal spending cuts have
forced public housing authorities to begin cannibalising
themselvesselling off properties to finance their operations.
Over the past two decades, increased poverty and declining
numbers of public housing properties have led housing authorities
to implement priority or urgent tenanting
policies. That is, those most disadvantaged, such as the disabled,
homeless and victims of domestic violenceall dependent on
welfareare allocated vacant properties as a matter of priority.
In many areas, the public housing shortage is so great that only
priority applications are likely to succeed.
In effect, these policies have substantially transformed public
housing, which once catered for large numbers of working people,
into welfare housing. These changes have impacted
on the incomes of public housing agencies and in turn compounded
their problems.
With most rents set at 25 percent of household income, the
revenue from welfare tenants falls far short of the market
rents that all governments, state and federal, have instructed
public housing agencies to collect. As a result, rental revenue
has decreased markedly over time, leaving massive operating deficits
in all states and territories.
In New South Wales, the most populated state and largest provider
of public housing nationally, over 90 percent of tenants are dependent
on welfare payments as their sole source of income. At the same
time, ongoing operating costs, like maintenance, staff salaries
and other overheads, have increased.
The report noted that NSW Housing has moved from having the
second largest operating surplus in 1990-91, to having the third
worst deficit. Tenants consequently face unacceptable cuts in
repairs and maintenance. NSW Housing estimates it now has a maintenance
backlog in excess of $600 million.
Under this pressure, the cannibalising of public
housing is already well underway. The total stock of public and
community housing in Australia declined to around 375,000 in 2000-01,
from a peak of 380,000 dwellings in 1996-97, despite a rising
population.
People working for the Department of Housing in Sydney explained
to the WSWS that each divisional office across the metropolitan
area has been asked to include revenue from the sale of properties
in its operating budget.
In some areas there has been something of a frenzy to sell
properties, with sales strategies being planned in
an attempt to cash in on Sydneys recent property boom before
it ended.
Joint venture partnerships with private developers
have been established in other locations. Developers are permitted
to tear down existing housing estates to build new projects with
far fewer public housing dwellings. The major focus of this type
of partnership has been Minto in Sydneys outer
southwest. More recently, plans have been announced to demolish
public housing projects in Elizabeth Street, Redfern, near central
Sydney.
Starved of government funds, public housing area offices are
being forced into a kind of zero-sum-game, forced to rely on the
proceeds from privatisation to provide the most basic property
maintenance. Especially for vulnerable tenants, many of whom are
frail, aged or disabled, the lack of maintenance can be life-threatening.
In these situations, Department of Housing officers are working
under intolerable stress.
Public housing staff are being encouraged to maximise revenue
by ruthlessly pursuing tenants in rental arrears and those committing
rental fraud. When tenants apply for rental subsidies,
and fail to declare or wrongly declare levels of household income,
they are accused of fraud.
Strict electronic work monitoring systems have been installed
across the department, which highlight staff inaction in the management
of rental arrears. Officers are compelled to institute legal proceedings
against tenants who fail to pay their rent on time.
Shift to private subsidies
The policy shifts that have eroded public housing began under
the Hawke-Keating Labor government from 1983, when market-driven
models were implemented. Cash rental subsidies were paid to welfare
recipients who were unable to find public housing. This allowed
private landlords to profiteer, as low-income households were
directed away from public or community housing options.
At the same time, funds to build new public housing were slashed.
Between 1990-91 and 2000-01, real capital funding fell by 25 percent.
Funds provided by the federal government dropped by 22 percent,
while state and territory governments cut their contributions
by 32 percent.
These cutbacks saw the number of people on public housing waiting
lists dramatically increase. Today more than 200,000 people are
waiting for a place in public housing.
Rising property values and housing costs have placed an intolerable
burden on those excluded from public housing. Private rents in
all major cities have soared. Not just welfare recipients but
also working people on low incomethe working poornow
find it impossible to buy a house and increasingly difficult to
rent privately, especially in Melbourne or Sydney, the two largest
state capitals.
Private investors and landlords have cashed in on the property
boom by pushing up rents, leaving tens of thousands of families
destitute. There has been a sharp increase in the proportion of
low-income tenants suffering housing stressthat
is, paying more than 30 percent of their income on rent. In Sydney,
the housing stress rate grew from 67.3 percent to
80.7 percent between 1986 and 1996.
The reports authors noted: The supply of low cost
private rental housing declined by a significant 18 percent over
the period 1985-1996 at a time when the private rental market
grew by 34 percent. This decline in the low rent stock was widespread
throughout Australia, although the loss of stock was most severe
in the Sydney metropolitan region. By 1996, there was a
national shortage of low cost rental accommodation of 50,000 dwellings.
Following the New Zealand model
To address the situation, the report recommended that governments
recognise a Community Service Obligation (CSO) to
provide public housing. It cited the example of government payments
to corporatised electricity and water supply companies to subsidise
pensioners bills.
In effect, this would mean fully transforming public housing
authorities, like the utilities, into profit-making enterprises.
They would sell off unprofitable dwellings, purchase properties
that can be tenanted for full market rent, and provide a reduced
service for the most disadvantaged tenants. For those who simply
could not afford the escalating market prices, government subsidies
would shore up the bottom line of the corporatised housing agencies.
One of the models advocated by the authors is New Zealand,
where the Labor government of Prime Minister Helen Clark has retained
the corporatised Housing New Zealand Corporation (HNZC) established
by the previous National Party government. By 1999, just before
Labor took office, HNZCs 63,000 tenants were being charged
rents of up to 70 percent of their income, pushing many into appalling
poverty.
In housing, as with other policies, the incoming Clark government
continued the thrust of the drastic free-market restructuring.
In 2001, after years of massive HNZC selloffs of valuable properties
in and around Auckland and other cities, the Clark government
agreed to pay a subsidy to tenants who satisfied an income means
test, thus ensuring HNZCs profitability in the low-income
sector of the market.
Berry and Halls report concluded that corporatised authorities
like HNZC could likewise produce modest operating surpluses for
Australias state governments. While their report helps to
explain the current desperate public housing situation, their
primary concern is that governments have wasted opportunities
to make money out of the affordable housing crisis.
Under their model, the same market forces that have decimated
public housing would continue to operate, assisted by more government
subsidies. Public housing, a concession won by the working class
in the period following World War Two, would remain in name only,
providing a residual service only for chronically disadvantaged
tenants.
See Also:
Senate committee finds four
million Australians living in poverty
[20 April 2004]
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