Sat. Jul 6th, 2024
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The claim

Under pressure to ease the rental crisis in Australia, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese recently joined state and territory leaders in unveiling a plan to boost affordable housing.

The initiative includes a $3 billion federally funded incentive for states and territories to build additional homes, along with an agreement limiting rental increases to once a year.

The deal came amid the federal government’s ongoing stoush with the Greens over Labor’s signature housing policy: the Housing Australia Future Fund.

The Greens are refusing to support the legislation, instead calling on the government to increase direct investment in public housing and to coordinate a two-year rent freeze and rental caps.

The Greens’ housing spokesman, Max Chandler-Mather, denied that the National Cabinet’s agreement to limit rental increases to once a year represented progress, arguing that such a policy already existed in almost all jurisdictions and would do little to protect renters.

“The problem isn’t that rents can only go up every 12 months,” he told the ABC on August 17. “The problem is at the end of those 12 months, rents are going up by record amounts.

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“In fact, they are going up at the fastest rate in 35 years.”

Is that correct? RMIT ABC Fact Check crunches the numbers.

The verdict

Mr Chandler-Mather’s claim is a fair call.

The housing rents component of the latest quarterly consumer price index (CPI) data shows that over the three months to June 30, rents increased by 2.5 per cent.

Indeed, this was the fastest quarterly increase recorded since the September quarter of 1988 — just under 35 years ago.

Experts noted it was reasonable to make a claim about rising rents based on quarterly data.

However, they also said the broader context should be taken into account.

For example, when considered on an annualised basis, rents over the year to the end of June increased by 6.7 per cent which was below the 8.4 per cent increase recorded over the year to December 2008 — almost 15 years ago.

Also, the recent spike in the cost of rentals was preceded by more than a decade of slow or negative growth in rents.

A long queue of people standing along a driveway and along a street
High demand for rental properties has seen long queues forming at rental property inspections.(ABC News)

Measuring rent increases

Experts told Fact Check the most authoritative data on rents was captured by the CPI published by the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS).

CPI data measures changes in rents across a broad sample of rental properties including both public and private dwellings.

Joey Moloney, an economist and senior associate at the Grattan Institute, noted there was one key drawback with this data: it only reports on capital city rents.

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