Under the plan,which would build 360,000 affordable homes over five years for people to buy or rent at a net cost of $12.5 billion,property developers would make $2.2 billion in the first five years of the scheme alone to manage and maintain the properties,and billions more building them.
Seventy per cent of the homes would be rented out,with a fifth of those reserved for the lowest-income earners. Rent would be set at 25 per cent of the national average household income,with that money flowing back to the government.
The other 30 per cent of homes would be sold to owner-occupiers at 5 per cent over the cost of procurement. The houses could only be sold back to the government,at cost price plus inflation.
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“Unlike public housing today that heavily restricts access based on incomes,homes will be available to anyone who wants to rent and anyone who doesn’t already own a home,” Chandler-Mather told the National Press Club.
But Grattan Institute economy policy program director Brendan Coates said the Greens’ policy design is expensive and fails to target low-income earners properly.
“It creates very much arbitrary lotteries,because they’re not very well targeted on who’s going to get the homes,” he said.