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House repossessions soar amid record debt levels in Australia
By Fergus Michaels
12 October 2006
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The economic position of millions of people in Australia has
become increasingly insecure, with debt levels reaching record
proportions. The Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) reported last
month that household debt rose 12.7 percent in the year to June,
to $795 billion. Over the past ten years, the ratio of household
debt to income has jumped from 60 percent to 171 percent.
Most of this change was propelled by increased housing costs.
Some $785 billion is owed on housing, up tenfold from $75 billion
in 1990, according to the RBA.
The impact of mortage debt on households is the product of
two factors: the amount borrowed and the prevailing interest rates.
Currently Reserve Bank interest rates stand at 5.75 percent, much
lower than 1989, when they reached 17 percent under the Labor
government of Paul Keating. But the pressure of mortgages has
increased because property prices have soared.
According to the Real Estate Institute of Australia, median
house prices have jumped from $202,000 to $516,000 in Sydney and
from $144,000 to $359,000 in Melbourne during the past decade.
The average mortgage on a new home is now $230,000, compared with
$68,000 in January 1990, so a relatively small rise in interest
rates can produce crippling levels of debt. For millions of working
people, especially the young, even the thought of buying a home
has become virtually inconceivable.
There is another factor also at work. Mortgages are part of
a debt structure upon which millions of people rely simply in
order to live. The number of people withdrawing equity from their
homes has grown by 30 percent since 2003. According to the RBA,
about $6 billion a year of this borrowing is funding consumer
spending. Paul Gordon of financial advisers IPAC commented: A
lot of people put their credit card debt into the mortgageand
it just soaks it up. In reality you are creating an unbelievably
large, long-term debt.
Yet credit card debt is also continuing to rise, and this is
starting to impact on borrowers ability to repay their mortgages.
In January, consumers held a record 12.6 million credit cards,
up almost a million from a year earlier, with an average debt
of $2,656 a card.
Some 46 percent of 18-25 year olds now have a credit card and,
in 2003, Financial Counsellors of NSW reported that more than
half the 18-24 year-olds it interviewed had debts of more than
$14,000, while a quarter had more than $20,000. Some of this has
been incurred under federal governments Higher Education
Contribution Scheme (HECS) and the Higher Education Loans Program
(HELP). Under these schemes, students and graduates owe the government
more than $13 billion, and the figure is set to reach $18.8 billion
by 2008-2009. The average HECS\HELP debt is approximately $10,500.
In one form or another, huge debts have become an inescapable
fact of life for wide layers of the population. Deutsche Bank
Australias chief economist Tony Meer warned: Debt
levels keep on rising and the risk level in the whole system just
keeps going up. Its got to be a worry.
Many people are stretched to their financial limits and beyond.
In the June quarter, for example, households paid out an all-time
high of 21 percent of after-tax income on regular financial bills
such as mortgage payments, insurance premiums, council rates and
rent. IPACs Paul Gordon commented: Three quarters
of the population are spending more than they earn ... they are
going from week to week, month to month and surviving.
Factors such as loss of employment, higher interest rates or
increased living costs can have dire social consequences and thousands
of households have already faced economic ruin. According to recent
figures provided by the New South Wales Supreme Court, in the
12 months to March 2006 repossessions by financial institutions
climbed to 4,837, more than double the level three years ago.
In Victoria, this figure increased by 52 percent in the six months
to June, compared with the same period last year.
Rising interest rates and falling house prices are opening
up new dangers for over-extended borrowers. Rates have risen seven
times since 2002, and twice this year already. On a loan of $300,000,
homebuyers now pay around $150 a month more than a year and a
half ago. A recent survey found that 36 percent of 2,065 respondents
would see their capacity to pay back their mortgage significantly
impeded if interest rates rose another percentage point.
Any fall in property prices means that, if people come under
financial pressure, they cannot sell their homes without suffering
huge losses or going bankrupt. The global property boom was particularly
strong in Australia. According to a report by the OECD, at one
stage Australia had the highest prices relative to rental levels,
the third-highest prices relative to incomes, and the fourth-highest
levels of household debt relative to incomes.
Since the peak of the boom in 2003-04, prices have fallen by
an average 10 percent, with some working class areas affected
far more severely, particularly in western Sydney. For example,
a one-bedroom unit in Cabramatta, purchased for $262,500 in 2003,
recently sold for $95,000about a thirdat a repossession
auction. In August, a house at St. Clair sold for $260,000, a
loss of 42 percent on the 2003 purchase price of $450,000.
Financial Counsellors Association of NSW vice president David
Bell warned: Theres a fundamental difference nowhouse
values have dropped and people simply cant sell their home.
The various federal and state political leaders have responded
with crude attempts at political point-scoring. NSW Premier Morris
Iemma remarked: These are the terrible consequences of [Prime
Minister] John Howards interest rate policies. NSW
opposition leader Peter Debnam blamed the high-cost, high
tax, high regulation regime in NSW, without offering any
alternative policies that would make life more affordable.
Federal opposition leader Kim Beazley said interest rates had
risen due to Howards broken promises, which
had led to bottlenecks in the economy. Beazley nominated
a lamentable collapse in training in relation to trade skills
... and lack of national leadership on infrastructure issues.
For his part, Howard simply declared as false any
connection between interest rates and the soaring debt burden,
implying that debt had risen only because of higher house prices.
Taken collectively, these empty phrases only serve to underscore
the fact that neither Labor nor Liberal, at state or federal level,
can formulate any genuine response to the potentially explosive
financial and social problem of massive household debt and home
repossessions.
The financial stress now being experienced is particularly
politically significant. A key plank of Howards 2004 election
win was a scare campaign about higher interest rates under Labor.
Until recently, higher house prices continued to create an illusion
of wealth for homeowners. Now, with ever-rising interest rates,
the financial threat to mortgagees, coupled with growing levels
of household debt more widely, threaten to puncture the Howard
governments officially-cultivated image as a steward of
prosperity.
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