Foreigners pay dearly for Australian homes

The Hidden Creek estate in Kiambu County on March 9, 2016. Sydney is ranked only second to Hong Kong as major cities with the world’s least-affordable housing. PHOTO | SALATON NJAU | NATION MEDIA GROUP

What you need to know:

  • Lend Lease said the sale broke local records but such reports have also fuelled calls for government action to protect Australian buyers.

SYDNEY

Sydney is imposing new taxes on foreigners buying homes as concerns grow that a flood of mostly Chinese investors is crowding out locals and killing the “Great Australian Dream” of owning property.

Ownership rates across the country are among the highest in developed nations, with having your own house long viewed as a key aspect of Australian identity.

But as prices rise to record levels — Sydney is ranked only second to Hong Kong as major cities with the world’s least-affordable housing — new potential homeowners have been increasingly forced out of the market with foreigners blamed as a key factor.

“The governments want to respond to a perception about housing affordability and the impact of foreign investment on that,” KPMG Australia’s indirect tax specialist Michelle Bennett told AFP.

“(Politicians) are raising money from people who aren’t voting, so superficially you can understand that it’s possibly not bad politics,” she added, but warned the measures could be a “blunt instrument” that could hurt the market.

Last year, leading apartment developer Lend Lease sold out more than Aus$600 million ($445 million) worth of new units in Sydney’s Darling Harbour in under five hours, with The Australian Financial Review reporting that one-third of buyers were foreign.

Lend Lease said the sale broke local records but such reports have also fuelled calls for government action to protect Australian buyers.

In response, the New South Wales, Victoria and Queensland state governments have introduced or are set to slap new property and land taxes on foreign buyers, sparking an outcry from developers fearful that they will flee to other markets such as New Zealand and Canada.

“It is very bad. Without the Chinese nothing would ever get built,” the country’s richest man and head of prominent developer Meriton, “high-rise” Harry Triguboff told The Australian Financial Review this week.

“Sales volumes have already dropped and prices are coming down steadily. The Chinese buyers are already disappearing.”