Redland Bayside NewsRedland Bayside News
  • News & Editorial
  • Digital Editions
  • Pickup Locations
  • Advertise With Us
Reading: Treasury warns rent freezes would reduce housing supply
Share
Notification Show More
Font ResizerAa
Font ResizerAa
Redland Bayside NewsRedland Bayside News
Search
  • News & Editorial
  • Digital Editions
  • Pickup Locations
  • Advertise With Us
Follow US
Redland Bayside News > Real Estate > Treasury warns rent freezes would reduce housing supply
Real Estate

Treasury warns rent freezes would reduce housing supply

Redland Bayside News
Redland Bayside News
Share
3 Min Read
HOUSING CRISIS: Treasury officials have warned against introducing rent controls, claiming such a move would push up prices in the long term. Photo: AAP Image/Paul Miller
HOUSING CRISIS: Treasury officials have warned against introducing rent controls, claiming such a move would push up prices in the long term. Photo: AAP Image/Paul Miller
SHARE

Rent controls would negatively affect the quality and supply of homes and increase costs in the long term, Treasury officials warn.

Senior department staff spoke about the impacts of rent freezes gathered from international research during a parliamentary hearing into Australia’s rental crisis.

Nicholas Dowie, Treasury’s housing strategy branch assistant secretary, said while rent controls might deliver benefits to existing tenants through lower prices, they also had a range of other effects.

“They negatively affect the quality of rental stock, they impose costs on future renters, lead to a reduction in rental supply, and increased rental costs in the long term,” Mr Dowie told the inquiry.

Intervention on rent prices was found to disproportionately benefit higher income earners, he said.

The evidence showed some home owners made the decision to sell their property due to rent controls, leading to a reduction in homes available to rent.

Samantha Floreani from Digital Rights Watch told the hearing renters were being coerced into handing over sensitive data to third-party sites, with little to no regulation.

“A lack of protections for rent and digital rights and a largely unregulated rent-tech sector is already hurting renters,” she said.

Ms Floreani said the platforms rarely served renters, and left them with close to no power to stand up for their rights in a tight market

Thousands of real estate agents admitted needing support to ensure they could adequately protect data, she said.

“If they (real estate agents) are going to collect that information and use that information then it is absolutely vital that they should be protecting that,” Ms Floreani said.

“If they fail to do so there should be repercussions.”

A renter told the hearing she had survivor’s guilt after she was able to secure public housing, with so many people waiting for accommodation.

The woman spoke of the humiliation of asking her mother to help pay rent and going to food banks for support.

Another lived-experience witness told the committee the “great Australian dream” was no longer available to working people.

A survey by consumer advocacy group CHOICE found two in five renters were pressured to use a third-party platform and two-thirds of users were uncomfortable with the amount of information disclosed.

Some sites generate a score on each tenant’s application, which increases if a renter ups their offer, while other platforms have mandatory fees.

In a submission, the First Peoples Disability Network Australia found those who were more identifiable as Indigenous were less likely to be accepted as rental tenants, and those who had their applications accepted were almost twice as likely to be paying more than 30 per cent of their household income on rent.

-AAP

Share This Article
Facebook Email Print

Latest Real Estate News

TOUGH SEARCH: Many retirees spend months searching for something affordable and practical, only to find few suitable options.
Stamp duty, soaring costs hitting seniors
Real Estate
SIMPLE PROCESS: A clearance certificate confirms that the vendor is an Australian resident for tax purposes.
Why sellers need a clearance certificate
Real Estate
Fiteni’s Botanix project reimagines a former nursery site as a vibrant neighbourhood.
Redlands developments claim state’s top honours
Real Estate
KEY TO SUCCESS: Looking after our elderly homeowners is so important.
A gentle sales guide to aid older homeowners
Real Estate

You Might Also Like

Laine Kidner with his wife Kim and two children, Max and Olivia.
Real Estate

Life is about family, footy and real estate

December 5, 2024
More than 60 per cent of households have one or two people, yet 75 per cent of homes contain three or more bedrooms.
Real Estate

‘Spare bedroom tax’ idea sparks outrage

September 8, 2025
Jan Goetze shares that the best part of real estate are the unique challenges she faces and the rewards gained along the way.
Real Estate

Jan Goetze’s vision for revitalised Redlands

January 17, 2025
TOP AGENT: Courtney Brown
Real Estate

Exciting time for Courtney Brown

March 13, 2025
Copyright © 2025 Local News Group - Website by LNG Digital
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?