The
headlines are relentless about homelessness and the cost of housing. Nowadays
$2,500 a square metre is not unusual even for a relatively straight forward
build. Building something unique (bespoke) will cost substantially more,
+$3,500m2. Given the average home is about 200m2, the building cost alone is
likely to be +$500k (plus land cost). So why does it cost so much to build a
house?
There are
many reasons, but mostly the cause ends up at the doorstep of local and central
government.
Local council fees. Council charges have increased
substantially since the Local Government Act gave them the ability to charge
development levies. The theory was that the levy would shift the cost of
providing roading, water and other new infrastructure from ratepayers generally
to developers. But that is not the practice. The actual cost varies by council
and the location of the development but may run into many tens of thousands of
dollars; $30k would not be unusual.
On top of
that there are the council’s other fees - building levies, inspection costs, and
so on. All up, that means that on a $400k home, local council fees may add
another 10% to the cost. Those are costs to the developer which are then recovered
through higher land and building prices.
The
development levies are a fixed cost and therefore much more significant in
percentage terms for small homes. One would have thought councils would be
doing their utmost to make it easier for those wanting to live in small or tiny
temporary homes, but not so. For example, the Christchurch City Council is
planning to extend the definition of a residential unit to include, "any
vehicle, tent, marquee, shipping container, caravan or boat used as a 'residential
unit' or place of business or storage as a building", in order to catch
these occupants within the council’s regulatory (and revenue gathering) net. One
couple said the effect would be to double the cost of their temporary home.
Local council planning rules. It is now widely accepted that limiting
urban boundaries (the so called “Smart Growth” advocated by greenies and
council staff) has encouraged land-banking and increased the price of land. Such
is the problem in Auckland that central government has introduced Housing
Accords and Special Housing Areas to get the job done. But this issue is not
only restricted to Auckland. Councillors throughout New Zealand have not had
the courage to take control of their planning department and stand up to media
savvy environmental activists.
The Resource Management Act (RMA). In 1991
the RMA was heralded by the politicians of the day as a visionary piece of
legislation. In reality, it has been an utter disaster and significantly
contributed to housing shortages and increased housing costs. While the Act has
been amended more than twenty times, the fundamental problems remain. These
include defining affected parties, the "compensation" needed to appease
those who object, and the costs and delays of the hearing process. Those costs
may run into hundreds of thousands of dollars should the consent be publicly
notified (which is commonplace given councils are now more restrictive about
permitted activities) and end up in the Environment Court.
An example involves a scruffy piece of land on the Tutukaka
Coast. The 6.6 hectares (16
acres) had been a forestry block that backed onto a coastal settlement. The
land was bought with the intention of rezoning it from Coastal Countryside to
Living and dividing it into 24 sections. A substantial area was to be set aside
as a reserve for native revegetation, and included covenants preventing
residents for owning dogs and cats. The consent process took six years, ended
up in the Environment Court, and cost $1.4m (significantly more than the land
cost). In the end, the consent was declined because the judge decided extending
the living environment was contrary to the council’s district plan, which was following
the Smart Growth mantra - and that there was a possibility that the residents’ visitors
may bring pets which might run off and
decimate the local Kiwi!
Had the subdivision been approved, the resource consent costs alone would
have added$60,000 to each section! As it happens $1.4m went into the pockets of
the RMA hangers-on, and 24 new sections and millions of dollars worth of new
housing were lost to the area.
Unfortunately this experience is all too typical. The RMA is an industry
built around a complex web of rules and regulation, perpetuated by those who
profit from it: councils, planners, commissioners, lawyers, judges, iwi,
activists, experts writing voluminous reports on largely immaterial issues, and
others. Each is in there extracting a pint of blood, a pound of flesh, or
advancing their cause at the expense of those brave or foolish enough to
propose a development.
Doing anything that involves the RMA and a local council consent is a gamble.
There is a high probability that things will go wrong and cost money. A
rational business person faced with those risks will only proceed with a
project when the returns justify those speculative risks. That limits the
supply of new sections and ensures that what is created comes at a price that
includes the developer’s risk premium - in other words, an investment return of
say 50% instead of 20%.
In addition
to the significant upfront costs of a development, a developer has holding costs which form part of the
eventual sale price of the development. Here's
an example, with three assumptions:
1. An investor needs to make say 20% p.a. on their investment to make it worthwhile,
2. The all up cost to develop a section is $100,000, and
3. The time between buying and selling the section is one year.
Under that scenario the developer would price the section at $120,000. If the third assumption is changed from one to 10 years, then they would have to sell the section at $300,000 to achieve the same annual return! In other words, protracting the consenting time from one to ten years has added $180,000 to the cost of a section. If you think 10 years is extreme, planning for the Long Bay residential project in Auckland began in 1998 but work did not start until 2011.
1. An investor needs to make say 20% p.a. on their investment to make it worthwhile,
2. The all up cost to develop a section is $100,000, and
3. The time between buying and selling the section is one year.
Under that scenario the developer would price the section at $120,000. If the third assumption is changed from one to 10 years, then they would have to sell the section at $300,000 to achieve the same annual return! In other words, protracting the consenting time from one to ten years has added $180,000 to the cost of a section. If you think 10 years is extreme, planning for the Long Bay residential project in Auckland began in 1998 but work did not start until 2011.
Why does it
take so long to obtain consent? A number of reasons:
1. Greenies
hold up the process to block development. It is absurd to consider that someone living hundreds of kilometres from the
subject property is treated as an affected party with full objection rights.
2. Iwi need
to be consulted, even when there are no sites of significance to Maori on the
land. Sometimes multiple iwi are deemed
to be affected, each providing their own cultural assessment report (paid for
by the applicant), which may require certain conditions to be met, most of
which involve payments by the developer to the iwi.
3. Council
staff take a precautionary approach. They require endless reports from experts,
usually to protect their own backsides, but in some cases they require further
expert reports because they do not agree with the earlier reports.
4. The court
process itself is often long and complex.
All of these
reports and consultations cost money and take time, and the costs become part
of the development cost which is passed onto the homebuyer.
It's because of the significant delays arising from the RMA that the government
introduced special housing zones in Auckland, to reduce the average time for
obtaining a resource consent from three to five years to just a few weeks. That
in itself is an admission that the RMA is failing, yet substantial reform of
the Act has never taken place.
Building sector regulation. The leaky building disaster prompted
central government to impose much more regulation. While this has certainly
improved the quality of the homes being built it has also added to building
costs. Labour costs in particular have increased substantially since the Licensed Building Practitioners (LPB) scheme came
into effect and created a restricted trade. Health and Safety regulations too
are much tighter since amendments came into effect in 2012 to reduce the number
of fall-related injuries. This is estimated to have added about $10,000 to the
cost of an average home. Construction firms now have much more stringent work
place safety regimes to follow, including additional costs in the form of
workplace safety plans etc, which add to their cost structure and need to be
recovered from the consumer.
Tax. New house builds include GST. As a result, a
$400,000 house costs $460,000, and there is a direct transfer of wealth of $60k
from the household to central government. Increasing the GST rate from 12.5% to
15% added $10,000 to the cost of an average home. It is surprising that those
campaigning to remove GST from food, have not mentioned housing.
All of these factors add substantial costs to housing
and land packages, making them unaffordable to those on low incomes. If central
government is really serious about reducing housing costs it needs to address
the severe failings of the RMA and revoke the charging of development levies. Those
two changes alone would result in reduced upfront costs and faster processing
of subdivision applications.
The government know what the issues are, but seem
to lack the courage to do what's necessary to get ahead of the game.
5 comments:
The Cost of Building a Home = The Cost of Bureaucracy.
What revealing figures, it is no wonder that Auckland and the rest of us can never catch up, with fulfilling the demand for houses. Frank exposes the height of the absurdity of just how much bureaucracy and its associated costs RMA, safety regulations, and all the other inflated form filling so called experts have on our lives.
How true the saying that “Great Empires and small minds go ill together”, what a blessing the pioneers of this country had in establishing this nation without all this rigmarole. If we want to blame anyone then we all are to blame for allowing this to happen, in blindly accepting the dictums that Officialdom knows best.
It is partly why Brexit came about (the E.U. and The U.N. further this concept and with Helen Clark at the helm....Wow how much more to come) and people wonder why the “Wind of Change” is blowing into a gale thru our political system.
The enemies of democratic freedom have fellow travellers right in our ranks...so why bother with a physical conquest when a “fifth column bureaucracy” one works so well.
Has anyone any ideas how to curb this monster?.......maybe the French have an old rusty Guillotine around with a tricolour, better still a Robespierre!!!
Brian
Once again with feeling now.
Rescind the RMA / Regulate the abandonment of urban boundaries / Crash local Councils.
With respect to the local Councils, it was Nanny who built the Auckland Empire.
Nanny could wipe out our Canterbury Regional, no trouble [ Rodney Hide ] but then built the mad Auckland Empire of rates.
Nanny is unwell. She is sleeping just now. Please don't yell at her.
Brian. I can only say well spoken, or written as it is in this case. The bureaucrats, unproductive, are totally engaged in a process of restraining those of us still engaged in productivity. I fail to comprehend how they sleep at night.
We can add the markedly higher prices in NZ for most building materials (compared with USA or Australia).
Robespierre was not very nice. We do not need monsters like him brought back.
Post a Comment
Thanks for engaging in the debate!
Because this is a public forum, we will only publish comments that are respectful and do NOT contain links to other sites. We appreciate your cooperation.