I'm sure many people are going to point it out, but in the video, I call Sydney a capital of Australia. It's not the capital and I'm an idiot. I know. Hopefully, it doesn't ruin the entire video for you, but I deeply apologize to all the proud residents of Canberra.
I'm not sure if it's as easily done, but isn't it possible to rerecord this bit and add it? Or would you use your current views? Either way, might be worth it.
They could build affordable housing, but it's impossible to build affordable housing without hurting the economy. Developers, investors, and home buyers spend billions on those expensive houses. So if the price of those expensive houses were to fall due to an increase in affordable houses, they would not be able to pay back the billions in loans borrowed to build/buy those houses.
Volume is pretty bad on vids. I have to turn my volume to max to be able to hear you properly. Which becomes annoying because of the ads that pop up and blow out the speakers. Not going to even attempt as using headphones because I don't feel like going deaf any time soon. The sound on your vids could be a problem in holding back people from subscribing.
Australia, Canada, New Zealand etc - countries where a foreigner can buy properties and no questions asked. Money laundering on a large scale. Mostly Chinese syndicates own thousands of homes in these countries.
The Chinese own a lot. As they work under one government. While the privateer works for many masters all in competition with each other to no ones gain.
@@yosefgamble5219 a ha not since 2018, but the new coalition government will apparently reopen the luxury housing market of properties worth $2million+ to overseas investors. Another sellout move that’ll cost us in the long term if it doesn’t devastate our domestic housing market quickly that is, i dare say the cost of living crisis has reduced the spending power of locals and savings have been ravaged😩
I’m Australian and Canberra is a shit hole no one cares about to all Australians, syd and melb are the important cities, Canberra is a mere administrative hub.
A couple years ago I would suggest moving to Adelaide. But it’s tough here now aswell. Although there are torrens title places in the northern suburbs for around $350k. Older places but it’s a start 🤷♂️
Spot on mate. Life here is t good anymore its so hard when working my shiteful casual truck driver job. Im getting less work even its truly a dreadful expensive and boring place to be while i watch chinese buy up everything and Indians getting all the work. As they are undercutting of course. Work for peanuts.
I lost a job to Indians a few years back cheaper to hire. In regards to cheese slices I went to buy one of my kids honey and it was 27 dollars for the squeezy tube my wife usually does the shopping I couldn't believe the price hike. Liquid gold
It's incredible the amount of whinging in Oz highest min wages in the world and you can't afford cheese even if you on dole you should be able to it wud be great if the whinging losers cud travel overseas and then come back apologize for being whinging loser people and appreciate what they have
Australian here. He is generally right about most things. He only quickly mentioned tax concessions as an issue but that and government policy in general is the big reason. The way tax works here for property makes it a huge way to make money. Then combine a dodgy banking system and you end up with a few people owning most of the properties. And if your a rich foreigner, if you buy over 2 million worth of property they will give you a passport. Then you have government policy and incentives that give people money for deposits. This seems like it helps but all it does is make property prices go up. When they had the covid lockdowns, they also stopped homes being built. So basically about 200,000 homes weren't built over those 2 or 3 years. Then they opened the borders back up and prices went through the roof. Finally, our housing minister for the government has 11 investment properties. Obvious conflict of interest as there's no way she will every do anything to bring prices down.
@@whitneyanders5945 it wouldn't have been any different. His party has always been against tax reforms to make housing cheaper. Their party also owns investment properties. They also want prices to go up.
Yes! And Wealthy foreigners are mostly Asian sweat shop owners that dump their kids here as students to the can later be sponsored in. Original Aussies should be angry?
Great video Dom. It is such a shame what has happened - my grandparents emigrated from the UK in 1969 and were able to buy a lovely house in the Adelaide suburbs for peanuts, despite the fact my Grandad was a welder on a modest wage. Nowadays someone in his position probably wouldn't even be able to afford to rent a decent house! Like you say, Australia either needs to build densely - ie lots of apartment towers in the cities - or build new settlements from scratch, otherwise the situation will become completely unsustainable. It's similar in New Zealand.
Nowadays, trade people charge a lot and earn a lot. Many trade people do not pay the right share of their tax since they charge cash for jobs. In Australia, doing some blue collar jobs earns much more than average employees.
Now we have mass migration of third world peasants - it's completely unsustainable even if you build high rise apartments. Australia can't sustain these numbers and is becoming a third-world country. More and more people will end up living in tents.
It's so fucking sad, I remember Sydney in the late 90s and early 00s.... it had its flaws... but there was so much energy in the city and people were genuinely happy with life... nowadays everyone got their head down in their phone... all look angry/stressed.
Housing in Australia is worse than bad right now. I’m one of the lucky ones. I’m homeless due to being disabled, unable to work and unable to afford rent, but I am lucky at least to have a roof over my head for now. There are so many more who’ve had to resort to housing their families in tents and many more living out of their cars. Lots of people paying most of their income just to keep their rental. Australia likes to make out that we take care of each other but the truth is that it ignores its most vulnerable and makes getting assistance very difficult and is looked down on by others. Meanwhile the rich capitalise on crises like this and bleed everyone dry and then they complain when people don’t have any money left to “support the economy.”
People shouldn't have to pay these amounts, amounts that take over half of their income to have a roof over their heads, haven't heard of people living in tents in our area in Australia but that doesn't mean they don't exist, they definitely exist, and it should be seen as inhumane to allow our people to have to resort to these measures. I worry each and every day about will my disabled relative be able to pay her rent. The sad truth is that you either try to tough it out with the rent increases or try to look for any homes that are available for rent: Which won't be easy at all due to the demand for housing.
@@Vivaerti It’s ridiculous. I was previously paying 50% of my income in a share house. Wasn’t even my own rental. Families are struggling on multiple incomes. Single people don’t even have the dignity to live in a decent house on their own in this country unless they have wealth or someone else taking care of it for them. I’m priced out of affording anywhere on my own, even for the most appalling properties available.
i pay less than %18 of my income for rent and im close to minimum wage and i live in Melbourne cbd i dont see why people pay that type of absurd rent @@chronic_daydreamer
On four occasions Dom makes it abundantly clear that he is totally committed to Australia having LARGE-SCALE immigration programs. This is because the MORE featherless bipeds you draw into the country is going to propel the economy by virtue of increasing demand of goods and services. He informs us that, he is a “big proponent of economic immigration”, and how this comes to fruition by way of the population of Australia (proportionally speaking) is increasing twice the rate of the US, and 6 times higher than France each year. One aspect of this program that he singles out is with international students: who are classified as temporary migrants - the great majority of whom are hoping to utilise their time here to gain permanent residency. Apropos to this, comes to pass with gloating about the revenue that international students channel into the country to stimulate the economy. Alas, the 1.1 million international students currently in Australia are the key factor with why availability of properties to rent, and why it is that rents are exorbitant. Therefore, because these interlopers need places to live in must culminate with placing extreme pressure on the availability of properties to rent: and this is so in all of the capital cities. This irrefutably means that, collectively, because they are vying for abodes to live in equates to them being responsible with why Australians are paying excessive rents. To demonstrate just how much Australia has OVERDOSED on international students is to point out that, the US, with a population 13 times that of Australia, has just (sic) 1.4 million international students in its dominion, in comparison to its 1.1 million. This means that for the US to have a ‘comparable’ number of internationals students to that of Australia would require it to have at least 13 million. Aside from these interlopers dispossessing Australians from having abodes to live in and, indeed, why rents are between 20-25 more than what they should be, another dire consequence of MASSIVELY OVERDOSING on ISs prevails with them being between 65 percent to 48 percent of 11 of the top 14 universities in Australia. But, of the 1.1 million in Australia, less than 200,000 undertake courses that can be construed as being worthwhile: such as medicine, engineering, architecture and IT. Amongst the remaining 900,000 is taken up with studying business and accountancy (400,000). Also, there are also in excess of 150,000 people in Australia on a student visa enrolled in vocational education and training courses: these courses include mundane spheres such as cooking, and hospitality. As for the rest, there are well over 100,000 foreigners - significantly from the PRC - studying English. And there are also at least 60,000 people in the country enrolled in primary and secondary levels of study. Clearly, the treacherous cohort of politicians - who are acting at the DEDICATED behest of educational institutions, big business concerns, and property developers - are fully prepared to sell their own people out: in order to propel economic growth. Unfortunately, what these low-life cretins don’t care one iota about is the horrible sociological cataclysm that will come to pass in 10-15 years when these re-colonists with no allegiance to Australia will subjugate the host country and people.
Great video -- and so glad the rest of the world is noticing... bring out more such videos on your channel. For context, I’m a South African Australian American - South African + Aussie dual citizen, US PR/GC holder - of Indian origin i.e., I am an Overseas Indian Citizen (OCI) - I lived most of my life in Australia before permanently moving to the US. My wife is an Indian citizen, an Australian PR and a US PR/GC holder who lived most of her life in the income tax-free UAE. I think you should hear this from an Aussie who has seen at least some of the world - the ‘awesome’ life in Australia that many talk about is mostly an illusion. 65% of Aussies have their wealth tied up in their third rate houses and 95% of Aussies are in massive private debt - be it credit card bills, home loans, personal loans or illiquid investments. Free medical care in Australia is a myth with most people not understanding what Medicare covers and what it doesn’t. Freedom is a rare thing in Australia with the Australian Government playing dumb when Muslims took over the Sydney Opera House last December, or when Khalistani terrorists violently assaulted Aussies of Indian origin. Pakistani and Lebanese rape squads have been prevalent in Australia for decades now. State Premiers and ministers are constantly in the news for corruption and nothing is ever done. Politicians even use the police to target their enemies. Australian police in all states are heavily corrupt and next to useless in general. The cost of living and housing affordability in Australia is another horror story - for instance, I was making over Au$200,000/yr and my wife was making around Au$100,000/yr in regional NSW - we couldn’t see how we would buy a house and bring up our children in Australia. The woke agenda of the US is a problem in Australia and the UK as well - but in typical Aussie stubbornness, no Aussie will talk about it or even admit it is an issue. As another example, a good mate of mine who is a born and bred Aussie coaches senior executives + is a best selling author and his wife is a corporate coach who is also a bestselling author. Together their income is over Au$250,000-300,000/yr and yet they moved out of Sydney because it was too costly - now living in Brisbane he still borrows his mother’s 20 year old Honda Civic to take his baby girl out because it is unaffordable for him to have his own car while saving up for a family home. Crime and substance abuse are a problem - ask anyone from Richmond, a suburb of Melbourne where you’ll see junkies passed out with needles sticking out of their arms. There are entire no-go zones in Sydney and Melbourne that no Aussie would talk about lest the world find out how imperfect Oz actually is… Australia is an economic basket case where foreign students or foreigners working on H1B visas in the US rush into because they get security in the form of PRs quicker (3-5years) than they would in the USA (20+ years). The US still is a first class economy with top notch schooling for those who are PRs (GC holders) or citizens. Lots of potential PRs and existing skilled migrants are now leaving Oz, NZ and Canada. The opportunities in the US are way higher than in most other countries - I am aware first hand about the opportunities in Australia, Singapore, HK, the UK and NZ as well because I received offers from all those countries and interviewed for some roles as well. If someone is a Canadian or Australian citizen, then working remotely from a small city in India, Thailand, Indonesia, Malaysia or Nepal is much more lucrative with a _low opportunity cost_ of leaving Canada or Australia: that person’s Canadian or Aussie passport is worth more than the quality of life in both those countries - ditto for NZ as well. Not so with the US, despite all its other faults - the opportunity cost of leaving - for PRs and citizens anyway - is _much_ higher. Also overall Americans are friendlier than either Canadians or Aussies. I hope my narrative paints a clearer picture for you and your audience. Now, I have a question for you although I’ve read your apology to Canberrans - _how did_ you conclude that Sydney is the capital of Oz 🤔 just kidding …I won’t rub it in.
Part of the reason Australians don’t want to live in high density housing is that you end up having to pay not only a mortgage but also exorbitant body corporate fees, it’s like having a second mortgage to pay which can never be paid off.
@@BB-xx3dv Sure, put they're doing that on purpose for a tax advantage. Also, you can't exactly make it your life goal only to rent from people who are changing under their mortgage and OC. Oc fees are ridiculous cheap anyway. It's not like you're not forking out rates and fees on lands. I feel all your arguments are just focused on being in the weeds and not taking in general about the subject .
@@BB-xx3dv Sure, put they're doing that on purpose for a tax advantage. Also, you can't exactly make it your life goal only to rent from people who are changing under their mortgage and OC. Oc fees are ridiculous cheap anyway. It's not like you're not forking out rates and fees on lands. I feel all your arguments are just focused on being in the weeds and not taking in general about the subject .
It’s worse than that, people can’t get rentals either and rents are high. The building industry is unregulated, so even if you build there are cowboys out there.
The problem isn't because it's unregulated; quite the opposite. You clearly don't understand basic economics. Otherwise, yes, rents are high and people struggle to find places to rent.
@@twisterli9177it depends on which part you are referring too? The building industry isn’t regulated. Folks can build multimillion dollar homes that need to be demolished. Waiting over 3 years for their home to be built because of the free money a few years back to improve the building industry. The rental market is having mum and dad rental investors leaving in droves because of the interest rates. Overseas or interstate investors buying all the cheaper established homes. Not enough land being made available to drive up land prices. Not enough housing on the buy or rent market. Folks offering way above market value on established or rental homes to get a foot in the door. Even me in my 50’s sold my home to build and I couldn’t get a rental and I’ve been forced to move in with my parents. Which I’m okay with now because I’m saving.
@@KatieB33 how are you defining 'regulated'. I am defining it as government interference into the market. Ask your friend why is it taking 3 years to build. I bet you it is because of council or environmental requirements.
@@twisterli9177I’m in Perth and our building industry is not regulated. We have hundreds of people waiting for builds because of the government subsidies they gave away during covid.
I used to comfortably rent a 3 bedroom house my whole adult life. I'm now 45, employed and sleeping in parks and creeks as I haven't been approved for any housing, with so many applicants and my single income doesn't look good for the future. Admittedly I do sleep in some beautiful places for free, I also pay $500/month for a storage shed and spend a shit load of money on aeroguard!
Yet not one Australian will demonstrate - they were born to be ruled. Even during Covid their "respect for authority at all costs" made them dob in Covid deniers in the thousands. Blame yourself Aussies you will still vote for the 2 big parties come election time.
I'm living in a rural town in Australia and the average home is 15x the average salary. Grocery shopping also costs a fortune. It's horrible and not any better anywhere else.
I'm a single Australian who wouldn't mind owning my own one bedroom apartment. There are plenty of these available too, the problem is they are bought exclusively by property investors who can rent them at exorbitant rates and if it remains unoccupied then they can write the loss off on tax and actually make more money. It's a matter of policy change that needs to happen to open it up and create a more egalitarian system. the problem there is that federal politicians themselves are benefitting from this system and are reluctant to change it. Look up our PM's property portfolio if you are interested. It should be considered legal corruption.
@@TheReaper1557 i think its more help from the government. Probs meant to “help” landlords who can’t get tenants (maybe) but its created an exclusive market where certain properties (in this case small aprtments) are near impossible to buy because investment groups don’t care how much they spend on them knowing that if they can’t rent at market value (which they deliberately force up of course) then they will get some sort of major write off on tax.
Not entirely correct. A gorgeous one bedder just sold for $300,000 in Guildford but you would not buy it because Australians are the most arrogant toffee nosed people about suburbs and their WRONG perceived ideas about suburbs.
In 2006-2008 I suddenly fell homeless following a domestic violence situation, as an ozzy/local single uni student looking for rock bottom housing options in Sydney CBD and along the North Shore (close to work, friends and family) there were dodgy basement rooms (picture a sauna) without windows and electricity underneath mansions for $150 pw vs $160-200 pw shared rooms (2-4 mattresses on the floor) or beds along corridors in CBD apartments, often run by weird gay couples. I looked for months while sleeping in my car and motels. This was over a decade ago but people in this city are cold blooded and depraved.
I see these types of videos being made about most countries. Honestly, a lot of people can't afford to live in a lot of places worldwide, and it's sad.
Not really. Western, capitalist countries - Oz, US & Canada have this issue. Many European and Asian countries have much greater supplies of social/affordable/government housing. Singapore has 80%, Vienna 60%... Australia has less than 4%.
@@tahliamobile BBC has produced several videos on people struggling to find housing that clears the margin of 30% of one's income in the UK. The classic metric that 30% of your income going to housing is basically unsustainable in modern metro environments. To meet that metric in a lot of urbanized nations you're looking at an annual salary of roughly $100,000-$120,000 US per year if you want to rent. That's insane, there are countless people are grateful to be working for $60K.
Immigration laws are being rapidly changed to limit the number of people who can settle in Australia. The ‘golden visa’ system allowed any wealthy migrant to essentially buy their way in to the country, and these people often paid cash for homes, building massive property portfolios which they write off on tax if they own a business. It’s completely ruined Melbourne and Sydney and has jeopardised their unique character and displaced local people. There are loads of dodgy real estate agents helping to inflate prices for their commission fees. It’s a mess and we need to kick out these dodgy operators asap.
Yeah you are wrong about our immigration system it's not mostlyletting in qualified people that we need pretty much every job is on the "skilled migration" list so we are saturated with Engineers and Accountants who end up driving Ubers. Skilled migration is only one part of the system as well we get a lot on student visas who attend fake colleges and then there are parental visas etc. The whole system is a mess.
Yes, the so called "engineers" and "accountants" come from one country. They simply buy their diplomas and qualifications. For a few thousand USD you become a highly qualified doctor....
@@bcgibson22 the so called international students don't come to Australia to gain knowledge. Once they are in Australia they will do everything to stay there for good. Same happening in Canada and we are talking about students from the same country.
@imaginaryuser tents in our country towns as well which is depressing as it wasn't that long ago that you could rent a place in a country town even on the Dole. If escaping out bush isn't even an option anymore we are truly lost.
Record immigration when there’s already a housing crisis just shown the literal disdain this government has for working class and lower income Australians.
Could also mention the tax system as a reason for excessive home prices - no capital gains tax on homes and overly generous tax concessions on investment properties - won't change with many politicians having multiple properties.
Politicians having multiple properties as investment has a lot to do with the issue in my opinion - no incentive to increase supply (and reduce prices) - something similar is happening in Ireland...
I live in Australia and the current rental market has skyrocketed in price. It’s very difficult to find a 2 bedroom apartment that isn’t below $800 per wk
@beaubeau6498 This lady is pretty accurate with the rental she stated. It also makes no sense to live somewhere that entails long travel distances to work and no sense to live in suburbs one feels less safe in.
If wages and taxes are the problem, then this country would have been unaffordable all along. However, thats not the case at all, Australia was a great, affordable place for decades and decades. Are you from America by any chance??
On four occasions Dom makes it abundantly clear that he is totally committed to Australia having LARGE-SCALE immigration programs. This is because the MORE featherless bipeds you draw into the country is going to propel the economy by virtue of increasing demand of goods and services. He informs us that, he is a “big proponent of economic immigration”, and how this comes to fruition by way of the population of Australia (proportionally speaking) is increasing twice the rate of the US, and 6 times higher than France each year. One aspect of this program that he singles out is with international students: who are classified as temporary migrants - the great majority of whom are hoping to utilise their time here to gain permanent residency. Apropos to this, comes to pass with gloating about the revenue that international students channel into the country to stimulate the economy. Alas, the 1.1 million international students currently in Australia are the key factor with why availability of properties to rent, and why it is that rents are exorbitant. Therefore, because these interlopers need places to live in must culminate with placing extreme pressure on the availability of properties to rent: and this is so in all of the capital cities. This irrefutably means that, collectively, because they are vying for abodes to live in equates to them being responsible with why Australians are paying excessive rents. To demonstrate just how much Australia has OVERDOSED on international students is to point out that, the US, with a population 13 times that of Australia, has just (sic) 1.4 million international students in its dominion, in comparison to its 1.1 million. This means that for the US to have a ‘comparable’ number of internationals students to that of Australia would require it to have at least 13 million. Aside from these interlopers dispossessing Australians from having abodes to live in and, indeed, why rents are between 20-25 more than what they should be, another dire consequence of MASSIVELY OVERDOSING on ISs prevails with them being between 65 percent to 48 percent of 11 of the top 14 universities in Australia. But, of the 1.1 million in Australia, less than 200,000 undertake courses that can be construed as being worthwhile: such as medicine, engineering, architecture and IT. Amongst the remaining 900,000 is taken up with studying business and accountancy (400,000). Also, there are also in excess of 150,000 people in Australia on a student visa enrolled in vocational education and training courses: these courses include mundane spheres such as cooking, and hospitality. As for the rest, there are well over 100,000 foreigners - significantly from the PRC - studying English. And there are also at least 60,000 people in the country enrolled in primary and secondary levels of study. Clearly, the treacherous cohort of politicians - who are acting at the DEDICATED behest of educational institutions, big business concerns, and property developers - are fully prepared to sell their own people out: in order to propel economic growth. Unfortunately, what these low-life cretins don’t care one iota about is the horrible sociological cataclysm that will come to pass in 10-15 years when these re-colonists with no allegiance to Australia will subjugate the host country and people.
It’s a bit of topic but Melbourne and it’s greater metropolitan area where property prices have skyrocketed as a city compared to the 80’s-90’s is an utter disgrace in so many ways. Go into the CBD doesn’t even feel like OZ. Back in the day people just seemed so much happier in general, kids in the streets playing, less traffic and generally a feel good vibe. Now parents are stressed out of there minds trying to keep up with the jones, traffic congestion is out of control,you barely see kids outside anymore, general demeanor of most people borders on depression and it’s become a soulless city in so many ways and woke beyond belief.
I do believe that people have a right to immigrate here, but we have taken on too many people that we just cannot accommodate. Not to mention that people can buy homes and apartments here even if they have not stepped foot into the country.
One of the main problems are developers. They are allowed to do as they please and they hold land and stall releases for years to push up price of land which cuts availability. On average you are looking at around $400,000 for a 400sqm block in any outer suburb of Brisbane, which is cheaper than other major cities. And now that Melbourne and Sydney is so expensive everyone is selling up and moving to Brisbane because they can buy cheaper here and still have money left over from their sale. This allows them to offer more for homes/property’s in Brisbane region so it prices locals out of the market and pushes up prices.
Brisbane is way more expensive now as a result. And theres alot of poor quality homes...broken asbestos, gas leaks and X flood homes. Ie all your clothes will turn moldy.
To make matters worse in Sydney, Some people have resorted to buying a mobile home/rv or caravan, to get out of the housing crisis. But there's a law preventing anyone from "freecamping." Unless you have a paid site, or find a freecamp site ( which isnt easy, they are usually located quite far from any town or city) it is illegal to park and stay in your van overnight. If caught, you will be asked to move and could or will be prosecuted.
@@elja7659I know this comment is old but this is beyond sad. I’m stateside in Florida and people are renting the RV in their backyard for at least 1,000 in a hurricane prone area. At least the mobile homes are strapped in up to category 3 hurricanes.sharing a room with a stranger is insanely unsafe. Even the same gender isn’t safe. Maybe if it was a close friend I would consider it if we had to.
On four occasions Dom makes it abundantly clear that he is totally committed to Australia having LARGE-SCALE immigration programs. This is because the MORE featherless bipeds you draw into the country is going to propel the economy by virtue of increasing demand of goods and services. He informs us that, he is a “big proponent of economic immigration”, and how this comes to fruition by way of the population of Australia (proportionally speaking) is increasing twice the rate of the US, and 6 times higher than France each year. One aspect of this program that he singles out is with international students: who are classified as temporary migrants - the great majority of whom are hoping to utilise their time here to gain permanent residency. Apropos to this, comes to pass with gloating about the revenue that international students channel into the country to stimulate the economy. Alas, the 1.1 million international students currently in Australia are the key factor with why availability of properties to rent, and why it is that rents are exorbitant. Therefore, because these interlopers need places to live in must culminate with placing extreme pressure on the availability of properties to rent: and this is so in all of the capital cities. This irrefutably means that, collectively, because they are vying for abodes to live in equates to them being responsible with why Australians are paying excessive rents. To demonstrate just how much Australia has OVERDOSED on international students is to point out that, the US, with a population 13 times that of Australia, has just (sic) 1.4 million international students in its dominion, in comparison to its 1.1 million. This means that for the US to have a ‘comparable’ number of internationals students to that of Australia would require it to have at least 13 million. Aside from these interlopers dispossessing Australians from having abodes to live in and, indeed, why rents are between 20-25 more than what they should be, another dire consequence of MASSIVELY OVERDOSING on ISs prevails with them being between 65 percent to 48 percent of 11 of the top 14 universities in Australia. But, of the 1.1 million in Australia, less than 200,000 undertake courses that can be construed as being worthwhile: such as medicine, engineering, architecture and IT. Amongst the remaining 900,000 is taken up with studying business and accountancy (400,000). Also, there are also in excess of 150,000 people in Australia on a student visa enrolled in vocational education and training courses: these courses include mundane spheres such as cooking, and hospitality. As for the rest, there are well over 100,000 foreigners - significantly from the PRC - studying English. And there are also at least 60,000 people in the country enrolled in primary and secondary levels of study. Clearly, the treacherous cohort of politicians - who are acting at the DEDICATED behest of educational institutions, big business concerns, and property developers - are fully prepared to sell their own people out: in order to propel economic growth. Unfortunately, what these low-life cretins don’t care one iota about is the horrible sociological cataclysm that will come to pass in 10-15 years when these re-colonists with no allegiance to Australia will subjugate the host country and people.
I live in a small country town in South East Queensland, Australia and it is almost impossible to buy a home unless your a millionaire. And here they even want you to pay a dead minimum rent price of $380 rent a week for some small ran-down dump with no garage place for your car. Even for rent for a decent family home per week is still starting to overtake the weekly income here and that's not even including the costs of food or vehicle running costs. Also Sydney is just the capital city of the state of News South Wales. Canberra is the of Australia.
What I think is funny is that there are towns in Queensland that have car thefts, burglaries, and assaults regularly from the "you know who" people. Yet property owners expect you to pay half a million dollars for the privilege of getting robbed. Dude, if that doesn't cause prices to go down nothing will.
One of our biggest problems here in Australia is that in the 90's, the liberal party decided to "boost the housing industry" by lowering the capital gains tax by half and this lead to many people that had properties to borrow against to buy up more homes and turn them into "investments" aka rentals and because they could use the negative gearing tax offset if the rent wasn't covering the mortgage, rates and bills , it just made it easier for wealthy people to end up with a "healthy portfolio" while being slum lords. The other issues we have with not being able to build new homes is that most cities (Like Adelaide) have had vacant land and lots of it but the government doesn't release it for development until it's desperately needed. This from of land scarcity is what drives up land prices as "Adelaide cannot expand as there is beach and hills" which was a lie as new suburbs are slowly being released over time but the number of houses are low. Another problem is urban infill where in most cases an old trust home or whole suburb of government trust homes get replaced with newer homes that are on a smaller lot of land, ie, two 350m2 lots where a 700m2 was but this has caused many issues from effectively doubling the number of households, one issue is that the utilities can't handle the extra loads but nor can the roads take the traffic and with most of these smaller land lots having larger houses on them it becomes a case of on street parking for most (also that we are way too car centric) so all the curbsides are cluttered with parked cars. Lastly we don't have enough builders and trades people to quickly build new homes as most old brickies and chipies have now been long retired and while many young people did seek and do apprenticeships, there isn't many companies to work for as many of them went bust during covid and the companies that have survived are barely surviving due to material costs doubling in the past 5 years. Long story short, in 2002 houses in ADL were only between $140k to $250k in inner city suburbs, Unley had places going for $450 ~ $600k (rich suburb). 20 years later and those prices have more than tripled with most inner city homes fetching $800k+
To make matters worse, the building codes for high-density high-rise apartments are quite inadequate to ensure quality built. There are news of cracks, leaks, and other building defects reported on recently built apartment blocks, so potential home owners are weary of buying apartments, making stand-alone houses even more expensive.
That's how I feel as a American. Lots of new stand alone houses suck too. But renters have so few rights and nosey neighbors in apartments is not attractive. Honestly feels hopeless either way you look at it.
In the late sixties, I lived in Sydney, and house prices were ridiculously low. One could choose from three types of houses: fiber, wood, or brick. The price of a fiber house was around A$20,000, a wooden house was priced at approximately A$25,000, and a brick house cost about A$35,000.
In 1964, University of Sydney Professor of Political Science Donald Horne wrote, "Australia, a first rate country run by second rate people..." This is still the case. 1970's Highest wages/cheapest Electricity in the world, NOW, Highest wages/most expensive Electricity in the world. Venezuela of the South Pacific (instead of being The Norway of the Southern Hemisphere) here we come. Professor Horne was SO right.
What Vice Chancellor (of Canberra University) Horne actually wrote was, “Australia is a lucky country run by half rate people who share its luck” - sadly most bloody Aussies don’t know where the phrase lucky country originated 🤣
The smartest thing that should be on everyone's mind right now should be to invest in different streams of income that are not dependent on the government. Especially with the current economic crisis around the world. This is still a good time to invest in gold, silver, and digital currencies (BTC ETH...).
Well explained. Financial education is indeed required for more than 70% of society in the country as very few are literate on the subject, thanks to Mrs Charlotte Walsh the lady you ones recommended
Wow.. I know her too she is a licensed broker and a FINRA agent she is popular in US and Canada she is really amazing woman with good skills and experience
Wow, exact same as here in Vancouver. City zones for single family homes only, supply of apartments is tiny and there are bidding wars for places to live
Yep, here you have huge amounts of people go to a rental viewing and people offering more than the advertised rent to get ahead of competition to get a place to live.
Dude I used to live in a suburb in Brisbane the one Chinese trustie owned 250 homes in that suburb. This is repeated all over the country. We need to stop overseas investment in the residential sector until we catch up.
That is outrageous. I'm not against investment properties, but to buy so many, and they're sitting there when a family can be housed seems criminal. Foreigners can't buy homes in China, so I don't know why it's unregulated the other way around.
@@chigasaki06 yes you can buy home in china. u just poor ass kid. btw buying home in china is categorised as foreign investment and eligible for Permanent Resident visa in China. But if you can not afford $1m property in Australia for 30 years loan, you won't be able to afford $3m property in China for 5 years loan.
Government concessions for investments in housing contribute to the high cost of home ownership and rents in Australia. Unfettered migration to Australia doesn't help either. There are still many people who can afford to live in Australia. Those who own their own homes are mostly doing okay. People on very high incomes are doing fine. Politicians are comfortable with their incomes. The people who are really hurting are those on low or fixed incomes and those who are renting.. We can't fix the housing crisis until greedy investors realise that they shouldn't self-aggrandise at the expense of others in the community.
I heard on the radio the other day that the Average person earns approx 60,000 per year, and for someone to confortably live in aus they will need to earn atleast 150,000 a year... Really opened my eyes when i heard that on Nova...
I'm managing at the moment, but won't be for long if it keeps getting worse. I'm not on a very high amount, about $28 an hour and only work 37.5 hours a week. My brother and I bought a house about 4 and a half years ago before it got really out of hand, lucky we did because if we had to do that now, we'd be screwed.
The trick is really easily fixable. It is all a marketing trick. Just take the Netherlands as an example, it is one of the most densely populated countries in the world, but with the best infrastructure in the world. Build a new city with European, Dutch-style infrastructure that is easily walkable and has great public transport, and stores, and shops on every corner, and do the marketing trick, so everyone will love to live in such a city. The supply will go up, and the demand for houses will go down. And trust me, I have lived in Europe (The Netherlands) and I have lived in New Zealand/Australia, it is 100% easier to live in a dense city, especially in a European (Dutch infrastructure) city. Walkable, likable, with great public transport and with shops on every corner. And a lot od squares. People will love it. Cheers.
🥂🍾❤🫖☕tea? 🍻🍺cheers ! Lovely & innovatively moving, emotionally with the feeling of confidence of a much needed breath of airring the perplexing problem as matter of factly quickly solved🤝on a positive 🎵 note ! Bravo💐& if correct then...one can only wonder why not ...? Australia ☀️make it so!! 🙌 God's speed & God Bless🫶 🪨The bush people? 🦘R they without complaints on their origins of Land location and how's about all that 🙄gold lying in the red dirt that's seems hardly yet easily 🫳picked up🧑🦯 💰👝⛏️🪤💛🧭 &🦘HopN-R🥊ing Roos🦘🌏much🦘punch🦂r sting yet lasting🫗drop💧🕳️🔥🌵❤️🔥🌙goodnite.
Yes, and they made cycleways a priority. So private vehicles are greatly restricted. Unfortunately, these idiots in Australia still love their stupid motor vehicles.
I was hearing tons of issues with housing in the Netherlands 2 years ago did it fix? Also your argument sounds nice but let's be honest. It won't happen. With all respect it just sounds like you fall into the category if people who say what should happen rather than the what will actually happen. I'm not disagreeing with you on how that would probably be beneficial. It just won't happen. You can support something while acknowledging the flaws.
Basically the way I understand it is this, any 1st world English speaking country wether Canada, Ireland or Australia you will have to work like crazy to live in. So if your determined to not change your language and have safety your going to have accept these things. So basically with house prices so expensive in these countries you gonna have to just pick the spot you like the most and stay there.
Nope! That's because the same greedy group is buying up the real estate to use invest properties and not for living in so anywhere where they allow foreigners to buy up swaths of land and homes purely for speculative purposes, this will happen. Canada has now grown a pair and has blocked foreign buyers until 2028. Of course buyers from that greedy nation have screamed racism. Shocking and ironic but more arrogant than anything that they claim they are the only ones being blocked from buying when Americans and everyone else is also blocked unless they actually plan to move into the country and live there.
I emigrated to Australia in 2000 and for a while it was amazing, perfect even. Things changed. From around 2010 Victoria became increasingly hot in the Summer and finding a place to live difficult. In the end I sadly returned to the U.K due to not being able to afford a home. You could say that housing affordability ruined my own personal dream, however I am clearly not alone.
On four occasions Dom makes it abundantly clear that he is totally committed to Australia having LARGE-SCALE immigration programs. This is because the MORE featherless bipeds you draw into the country is going to propel the economy by virtue of increasing demand of goods and services. He informs us that, he is a “big proponent of economic immigration”, and how this comes to fruition by way of the population of Australia (proportionally speaking) is increasing twice the rate of the US, and 6 times higher than France each year. One aspect of this program that he singles out is with international students: who are classified as temporary migrants - the great majority of whom are hoping to utilise their time here to gain permanent residency. Apropos to this, comes to pass with gloating about the revenue that international students channel into the country to stimulate the economy. Alas, the 1.1 million international students currently in Australia are the key factor with why availability of properties to rent, and why it is that rents are exorbitant. Therefore, because these interlopers need places to live in must culminate with placing extreme pressure on the availability of properties to rent: and this is so in all of the capital cities. This irrefutably means that, collectively, because they are vying for abodes to live in equates to them being responsible with why Australians are paying excessive rents. To demonstrate just how much Australia has OVERDOSED on international students is to point out that, the US, with a population 13 times that of Australia, has just (sic) 1.4 million international students in its dominion, in comparison to its 1.1 million. This means that for the US to have a ‘comparable’ number of internationals students to that of Australia would require it to have at least 13 million. Aside from these interlopers dispossessing Australians from having abodes to live in and, indeed, why rents are between 20-25 more than what they should be, another dire consequence of MASSIVELY OVERDOSING on ISs prevails with them being between 65 percent to 48 percent of 11 of the top 14 universities in Australia. But, of the 1.1 million in Australia, less than 200,000 undertake courses that can be construed as being worthwhile: such as medicine, engineering, architecture and IT. Amongst the remaining 900,000 is taken up with studying business and accountancy (400,000). Also, there are also in excess of 150,000 people in Australia on a student visa enrolled in vocational education and training courses: these courses include mundane spheres such as cooking, and hospitality. As for the rest, there are well over 100,000 foreigners - significantly from the PRC - studying English. And there are also at least 60,000 people in the country enrolled in primary and secondary levels of study. Clearly, the treacherous cohort of politicians - who are acting at the DEDICATED behest of educational institutions, big business concerns, and property developers - are fully prepared to sell their own people out: in order to propel economic growth. Unfortunately, what these low-life cretins don’t care one iota about is the horrible sociological cataclysm that will come to pass in 10-15 years when these re-colonists with no allegiance to Australia will subjugate the host country and people.
They should measure the amount of investment properties that are also deliberately left empty, which also adds to the problem and is a symptom of getting better return on the housing market vs the equity and bonds market.
There are SO MANY luxury homes along the Gymea Bay area EMPTY..and if the Cnts don't get their 2k pw rent then they don't want tonrent it out! It's fking messed up! I bet Obama owns a few and Scomo n Albo too
I’m happily living in an apartment complex in Melbourne (8 years) the problem is local councils knock back new builds due to complaining NIMBYS. Very selfish IMO where do these people want the growing population to live, tents?
That's because the same greedy group is buying up the real estate to use invest properties and not for living in. NIMBYs are now infiltrated by these foreign investors solely to artificially raise surrounding property values. GREED is the real problem.
@@andreaslind6338 > Seriously though, is NIMBYism in Australia also tinged with racism like it is in America? Partly, but it's not so clear as there are no exclusive gated communities here or mass relocations to segregate and avoid Blacks for example. NIMBY racism however happens en masse as policy. In Sydney, many First Nations people were relocated out of the city by the Howard Government for the Sydney Olympic Games, and elsewhere it is very serious e.g the Northern Territory Intervention and abduction of children and relocation of whole communities to get access to uranium. In the city, I'd estimate 1 in 8 people here are racist, whether they consciously act on NIMBYism probably not all though each district has certain tolerances and intolerances. e.g. Sydney CBD and surrounds is reasonably pro-Chinese and pro-Asian but anti-Indigenous and I suppose anti-Islander (I have never met an Islander living in the city). 1-2hrs North West in the Blue Mountains region there was a history of freed convict land owners and racial violence (genocide), and I hear bigoted friends mention "Arabs", "Afghans", and "Mexicans" (likely media influenced - Republicanism/Trumpism). But should an ethnic family move into such a semi-rural area it may trigger NIMBYism, usually only if neighbours feel the new resident is cramping their 'quality of life' or standing out unacceptably. 1-2hr South to the Cronulla area there's been a more recent history of race riots, with Australian flags on windows and cars. I have worked and passed through these places and never seen any First Nation people, anyone dark-skinned, obviously coloured or ethnic, wearing Middle Eastern or non-European clothing in these places.
Living in Australia, is painful.... we have (According to my mother whom I live with) $6,000 a month, and my poor mum who is working three jobs and considering a fourth can barley stomach it....
Australia is outrageously expensive to live. It's not just housing that's crazy expensive. Even things that were cheap are now expensive. I cant wait to retire and leave.
@@devinfraserashpole4753 "Allowing" refers to the Australian government. China is a lost trust country/culture, and they have little respect for Australian laws.
purchased my first home in 2010. had 2 car loans, and a personal loan on top of that. could still afford to save a very small amount to go on holidays, and able to pay bills on time. slightly tight but manageable. i had full health insurance and all other costs. now I've been homeless for a year, cant afford full health insurance, cant even afford the gap fees afterwards to use it much. always late on one bill or another and just shuffle around on extensions and payment plans. barely making it week to week even still. income in that 13 years has barely changed and at times gotten lower, but the cost of living and absolutely everything has just skyrocketed. cant save money, cant do holidays. we can seldom even do something nice for ourselves as everything is going to basic essentials. this country has us drowning.
I live in a caravan on the street in an industrial area of Melbourne. 1 minute to work. I spend 25 a week on diesel . I am happy. I can move where the jobs are
I do hope your warm and comfortable in the caravan mate. I've done it myself. Although I wasn't set up very well. I have no hope of ever owning a house. I have no hope for a bright future. Times sure are tough. Stay well.
it is illegal in Australia to live permanently on the boat or in caravan, even on your own land. Australia is red taped from every corner to make sure the property ponzi scheme goes on
Technicaly Canberra is the capital, but really... Anyways despite this, as an Aussie it's become ridiculously expensive to live. I'm on a six figure salary, supporting a wife an 2 dogs, and we sometimes have to go without essentials during the week.
Australia has a very manageable problem when it comes to a wealthy Rio Tinto / BHP / USMIC stock owning, property investor class that inhabits mostly acreages in bushy, hilly, leafy outer suburbs, 15km+ out of the CBD. Making these people's lives a living hell would be surprisingly easy if Aussies on Centrelink ever grew a brain and realised living on the street or a tent on $300 a week sucked. In fact, it's just a mechanism to keep you pacified. To any Brisbane based tent dwellers interested, especially if unemployed, there is a nice area in PULENVALE called McCASKILL ROAD PARK. It's located next to an IGA and the HITCHING POST BAR + GRILL, where you have facilities. The Park has equipment that can be used for exercise.
Oh you have no idea.. there's rich people buying up blocks of land and putting pop up or as you'd call them trailer park houses on tiny plots and selling the house to boomers with monthly land leases, and when they pass on, the house and land is given back to the rich land owners to be sold onto the next person. I want to leave Aus as I can't afford a house here anymore it's just depressing.
Unfortunately you may find it hard to find anywhere else NZ is the same golden visas massive immigration high rents and house prices to make you a slave till death.
Well explained. I am in the building industry and have matched my prices to the value of houses. A 40% increase in charge since covid. People might complain but I tell them to pull out the huge equity they have made from their house. People here are so stupid. They think they can have their cake ( million dollars home) and eat it too (cheap labour). Everyone has to pay for shelter and they will pass that cost on. "Australia the great Ponzi"
May I remind you of the fact that here in Singapore, a tiny island with 6 million souls lives like sardines in a can, where else in nearby vast bountiful Australia in Asia-Pacific which is ten thousand times 10,000 bigger with a mere 27 million inhabitants.. A similar situation in tiny and packed Japan, which is running out of space and land. Do you know that their living room and bedroom are the same place, and that most Japanese people sleep in their living room?
@@knowledgeispower8625 Slavery, Colonialism and Colonization are all evil things done and benefited by evildoers. Europe for Native Europeans, Africa for Native Africans, America for Native Americans, Asia-Pacific for Native Asians-Pacific islanders. By the way, many thanks for the insightful informative multi-page comment by 'Lonely Alaskan' at, "Complete History Of Indigenous America Before Colonialism", on RUclips.
"We're still here ... We are not going anywhere." - Native Americans 😔 As a Native American myself I felt heartbroken to my ancestors when I saw this. As I learn more of people's past I understand their pain everyday. The two most sacred Christian doctrines are, - Thou shalt not kill, - Thou shalt not steal 😔 Also a great many thanks for that supremely informative multi-page comment by Lonely Alaskan at, "Complete History Of Indigenous America Before Colonialism", on RUclips.
@@hellyeah7403 We feel your pain, your emotions and your silent message to the world. You are not forgotten and will never be forgotten. 🙏🤷 The land is the most valuable thing because there's no more land left in the world. Man's greatest enemy is himself. Greed is an animal. Greed is a major driving force behind Genocide, Slavery, Colonialism and Colonization which are all evil things done and benefited by evildoers.. Greed is behind everything that is bad. Those with no remorse or empathy for others who are greedy are the most cunning. They leave trails of debris, through Genocide, Slavery, Colonialism, Colonization, Imperialism., no matter where they go.. Whenever they left, they left it in strategic violence and tension.. It's such an evil world we live in. 😔
I live in Adelaide Australia and the housing affordability is pretty bad here.....not as bad as Melbourne or Sydney but bad enough that many young people have given up hope of owning their own home. And if they did scrape enough money for a deposit for a home theyd be under mortgage stress for the next 30 years. New homed are not only a big rip off but made of poor quality. Rents are unaffordable for many....if youre luckily enough to find rental accommodation to fit your budget. Bottom line is, Australia is a rip off country. if you got money left in your pocket after pay day then they think youre getting paid too much. Cost of living outpacing wage growth. 30 years olds still living with their parents. few Australians have children because they simply cant afford them. thats why we have mass immigration from the 3rd world which is changing the demographics of the nation. Australia is the luckier country, not the lucky country. If youre rich you'll love it.
Too right, lived here in Adelaide for almost my whole life and it was once a very affordable place to buy and live but no longer. I studied for many years at Uni and TAFE to end up with terrible employment opportunities here but ended up staying due to family. I have a mate who moved here from Canada a few years ago (originally from UK) and has a high paying job... He bought what I'd consider to be just a normal house in a decent beachside area and it was 1.6 Million Dollars. His mortgage is massive. Seems everything in Australia has gotten far worse since the 'health crisis' too.
Many people from the US, Australia, NZ etc. now move to Mexico. Great weather, opportunities and lower cost of living. Check out Mexico City for starters…
We can really blame John Howard and the liberals for setting up an unequal market by cutting the capital gains tax in half and making negative gearing so easy to utilise so that anyone that had capital could become a future landlord and just get the tenants to pay the mortgage off. Now we live in a dystopian society of slum lords renting shitty housing for crazy prices because there is so much demand. Adelaide could have expanded a decade ago as there was always new land down south but that's how this market keeps going through the idea of scarcity, now everything is "Urban infill" which is creating more problems than it was trying to solve.
One of the major problems that people have is that they want to be able to afford to buy in prime locations, such as Melbourne, Sydney, Brisbane, etc. If you really want to buy a house/property, maybe you need to face the reality that you need to look elsewhere. Somewhere that’s within your budget. I’m single and earn just on six figures. I wanted to live in Brisbane but I knew it was out of my budget so I looked elsewhere. I found a place which cost me only 3x my annual salary and is around 120km from Brisbane. Also, the job I have actually pays more than I would be able to demand if I was living in Brisbane too because employers need to attract workers to come and work in rural areas. I’m not trying to dismiss that the cost of living is just crazy at the moment, but people also need to adjust their expectations. You might have Champaign taste but you may only have a beer budget.
I agree with you for the most part. Aussies are to blame because they can't think outside the 2 party monopoly. When were Australians asked if they wanted to double the population (which is where this is going) Then they go to the polls and do it all over again. Beer is the new champagne in Australia "Just adjust" is not really helpful even though I know your advice is good, most can't do it and I can assure you that out in the rural area's it is pretty bad as well. Houses have doubled where I am in the last 5 years. (3 hours from Melbourne) Unless you have a skill that is really needed you won't find much escape out here or many houses for sale.
The benefits of record high immigration are FAR outweighed by the strain it places on the existing housing crisis. Simple solution is to cut it way back until pressure eases, and then slowly reintroduce. The problem is the people high immigration does benefit are the ones making the decisions.
Although that is common sense, it wouldnt improve our cost of living crisis by much. Because the problem didnt originate with immigration. The problem stems from systematic greed and an unwillingness to regulate the system in a fair way to the average Australian. Example - just look at what Woolie and Coles have been allowed to get away with for so long. (Price gouging the Australian public, ripping off farmers, illegally stifling fair competition)...all done under our politician's watch ... Big corporate are in control, not politicians.
@@eurekaelephant2714 No stop trying to defend immigration. Denmark, The Netherland and now England have come out with studies of people who contribute and their nation of origin. There is no point bringing in anyone who isn't white becasue them and their children do not once contribute they're dependents. Same with Eastern Europeans. Only immigrants from Western Europe, American and Japan actually put in more than they take out.
Do you also have major media/major political parties who won't discuss reducing immigration because those who profit from it are funding their real estate advertising/election campaigns. Not only won't discuss it, but shut down any interview where someone brings it up?
@wallys7444 Yes precisely we do. Infact, some politicians will slip out how immigration is a great benefit for the universities. Which in other words means that they're Profit 4X the amount on international students over Canadian born. They have no intentions or ever express reducing immigrations. They're trying to bring in 100k Ukrainians this year.
I just did an inflation calculation for Australia. (the RBA has an inflation calculator on its site) AUD 4,200 in 1970 would be worth AUD 58,000 in 2023. Average annual inflation of 5.1%. Based on that logic, average house prices should now be AUD 260,000. I can understand why the youngies nowadays are pissed.
in 1970 those houses were 2 bedders made of fibro. most of west Sydney didnt even have town sewage. There was no infrastructure like there is today. No internet. Badly connected to Australia and the world. Todays house and 1970's house is not the same.
@@sal78sal I disagree to some extent. The inner west of Sydney (eg Newton) definitely has significantly seen price rises since the late 80's. Something to do with the YUPPIES. Remember them? And the terrace houses there are tiny. Similarly, the townhouses of suburbs like Paddington, Surrey Hills and Darlinghurst.
@@RUHappyATMNo YUPPIES... it was high immigration numbers that lead to the increase in, inner city house prices most Aussie's were moving to the outer suburbs back then, to get away from the rampant drug problems back then.
Living in australia is a day to day struggle. If you are not well established in this country with atleast your own house don't risk it. It's not worth it at all
That's because the same greedy group that was buying up the real estate to use invest properties and not for living has been caught in their ponzi corruption schemes and that country is in a financial collapse right now. Their second large property developer is in bankruptcy liquidation court proceedings.
The older generation Australians who want to maintain the dream of home ownership will increasingly move to the country, especially as they retire. The immigrants who are more likely to adapt to high density housing will create enough demand to rezone suburban areas into high density. Ultimately it's less about the cities and more about the beach. There's beautiful and affordable places in the Australian interior, but they're all long drive to the beach.
I highly doubt that older Australians want to move country !! closer to services and not further away 😂 totally Incorrect . They will go coastal if anything or large towns with health services
@@user-ReachingForTheStarsWell, the whole point of the article was about lack of home affordability and large towns on the coast are still going to be expensive. I have older (middle aged) relatives who did exactly as I wrote, left an expensive rental in Sydney and moved to small town NSW (Armidale)and a brand new house. They absolutely love it. Have a huge garden. But hey, if you can afford a house in Sydney or the Gold Coast or whatever, that's great. This video was about those who can't.
@@milopbootheArmidale is actually nice. Not everyone can move to Armidale. I will be forced out of Sydney in my old age but your parents missed the boat-lots of CUBs in double bay who bought 20 years ago-your parents sound risk averse, like my mum. In reality Sydney needed more confident CUBs buying property. It’s all old money now.
You never own your home outright, you are ownly the title holder of the land not the owner! You still pay annual council rates, land tax , stamp duty and gst. The system is a broken rort!
I want to correct that the size of Melbourne's Urban area is NOT 10000 km2 since the Australian Census strangely counts nearby rural areas and national parks as part of the city (aka Greater Capital City Statistical Areas (GCCSAs) ). The true size of Melbounre's urban area is actually 2400 km2.
The point is the same. Melbourne still has barely half the residents in 7 times the space. All of the area shown in the graphic is built-up with houses.
Are you sure your not equating the "City of Melbourne" as the city of Melbourne? That is, there is the council administrative area of the "City of Melbourne" , a collection of inner city suburbs, & there is the city of "Melbourne" a vast metropolitan area of inner, middle, & outer suburbs, made up of many "city" council administrative regions, such as the "City of Moreland", the "City of Darebin" , the "City of Port Philip", the "City of Melbourne" etc .. In the graphic used in the video for the metropolitan area of Melbourne, all of that is urban & contiguous, so would very much count as City of "Melbourne", vs the much smaller "City of Melbourne" council administrative area, made up of the CBD & immediate suburbs. Or maybe the "true size" you state is just wildly outdated as "Melbourne" grew by a million people in 10 years before 2018 & has grown considerably since. Many of the previous gaps between suburbs have been filled, new suburbs built, council administrative areas added, & infill density development unleashed.. Just like many population statistics often take 10 years to use new census data in their calculations, so it is with many stats of urban areas globally, where the data used is woefully out of date.. I guarantee you that the "true size" of "Melbourne's" supposed area being 2400 km2 fits into one or more of these errors..
Using Google Maps, the area of greater Melbourne is approximately 2,500 kn2. 10,000 km2 is 100k by 100k - Craigieburn to Caoe Schank and Geelong to Pakenham, including the whole of Port Philip.
@@schroedernz Ok well i see your point.. But that infographic map of Greater Melbourne, which should really also include Geelong, given how it's very nearly joint up, but doesn't. That map of the entire urban area of Greater Melbourne, is all urban. You can drive all the way from Sunbury on the north periphery, to Rosebud on the tip of the Mornington Peninsula, & not leave roads with traffic lights or roundabouts, ie a contiguous urban area.. So the map of London over Greater Melbourne, that still stands.. Maybe the 10,000 sq km figure also includes Port Phillip bay, which would be wildly inaccurate. But that Urban map of Greater Melbourne in the infographic & it's comparison to London still stands..
Well, as a immigrant myself I think I can safely say that entire economy depending on immigration is not really a health thing to do, and will eventually be the ultimate downfall to a nation even if it might look like it’s working rn.
To a point, yes. The government needs to release more land. Not in capital cities necessarily, but smaller towns just outside the big ones. More investment in infrastructure to go between (better train lines, more stations etc). By not doing so they are artificially inflating prices, and keeping people locked into certain areas for jobs. I would move out of my major city in a heartbeat if that was the case. But too many people are making big profits from the current system and situation - so I doubt it will change in a hurry.
It is not all that - just outlaw equity loans for property and ban real estate agents who propel up prices plus no more than 75,000 migrants per year - problem solved.
The main problem comes down to mass immigration. Simply put, we have nowhere near enough houses for Australians because the government prioitises shoving as many 3rd world immigrants into the country as possible.
that's immigration on steroids to consume basic goods.. without immigration all they have is iron ore and flipping property to eachother atr high prices on borrowed money
@@Robinteeken896that’s bullshit told to us by the liberal government They activatly hurt our wages and housing prices woth each person they let into the country for their cheap labor
Cant afford to live in Australia is extreme, but if it stops ppl coming I support. The issue is that population growth from immigration has grown too quickly. 500,000 per year is the problem, 75,000 per year is sustainable. Chinese buyers, have pushed prices beyond local wages, and local parents are funding their kids to compete....
I’m 25 and can’t afford to live in a rural area with a full time job that was damn near life threatening I would need 2 roomates for a 1 bedroom place and even then i couldn’t afford food or my medication
I am going to die homeless because of this shithole of a country I could literally be homeless in anolafe like denmark and still be far better off than the average Australian
I used to live on the Gold Coast, beautiful place but my rent was $500 per week. I was lucky enough to buy an old house in a small town, so things are much better for me now. I feel sorry for young families who are stuck in the rent spiral.
I lived on the Goldcoast 7 years ago paying $ 380 for a 2 bedroom 2 bathroom Townhouse in Mermaid Waters was cheap as chips and my salary was pretty good but now it's very very tough as the rent is up towards $700 a week !
That’s not luck, you made a decision. People have to come to terms that you can’t just live where you want. You can only live where you can afford. It sucks, however that’s the reality we’re all facing.
It is getting a lot worse, very fast. I have been looking for a rental this month and everything has gone up $50 - $150 a week this month alone. Listings keep vanishing then reappearing on rental websites with increased rents, I have seen this happen several times. So many people are showing up to property viewings and everyone is so desperate, they are bidding up the rental price when they submit their applications, many rental websites allow you to do this. I have talked to a few people that are stuck in Airbnb's and paying $150 or more a night and going bankrupt as they can't find a place... This will not end well!
It slowly but surely is worsening each and every day, a day ago our household found out that our landlord wants to increase the rent by $100 soon. We are fortunate that we've already planned and packed some stuff for when we move and already had a solution months ago. Hoping you find a solution or home.
You forgot to mention the key reason why housing is in such low AVAILABLE supply & why it is so expensive.. The key is AVAILABLE.. That is, there is plenty of construction & has been for a long time. Melbourne should have had a massive OVERSUPPLY of particularly apartments, but also housing, given how much has been built, even accounting for both international & inter-regional & interstate immigration. But the key here is on AVAILABLE.. That is, most of the new housing is for investment purposes, be it for Negative Gearing tax concessions, or to flip at a later date, a store of wealth, or for short term rentals aka Air BNB. If a dwelling is built for investment purposes theres a high chance it is empty, or kept out of the long term sale or rental market. This can be seen particularly in Docklands, a suburb of the inner city CBD, where 90% of all the apartment skyscrapers are empty 90% of the time, & is repeated in many or most of the huge no of apartment skyscrapers in the CBD, in the areas surrounding the CBD, & throughout the entire metropolitan region, even as far out as 30km from the CBD where apartment highrises have been built, ostensibly to increase the supply of housing, but in reality to increase the supply of housing investment. Houses in Australia are like stocks or crypto first, & prioritised as dwellings to be lived in second.. Melbourne alone built somewhere in the vicinity of 20,000 new apartments in a 10 year period, but yet there is a huge undersupply of housing? There should be such an oversupply that the bottom should have fallen from the apartment market. And many feared it was going to in 2018, when there was 350 tower cranes operating at once across the metropolitan region, more alone than in the entire US, 80% of which were building apartments, from 20m high to 320m high buildings. But yet apartments have not stopped being built. The issue is also what type of apartments are being built, 90% of them arent suited to families, lots of them arent even suited to groups of flatmates. Most of them are suited to Air BNB, storing wealth, or as tax reduction vehicles. Most of them, even the ones that look really nice, are of massively poor quality too, due to the speculative investment nature meaning low margins after high prices for the sections for them to be built on, & many corners cut to maintain developer & investor profits.. All of the same applies to many of the 10s of thousands of houses & units in the outer suburbian periphery as well, with entirely new suburbs consisting of investment properties kept out of the long term market. Reduce the incentives to keep housing empty, such as by an empty housing tax where apropriate, & the housing undersupply will become an actual oversupply over night. Late speculative investors or overleaveraged investors might get burnt, but this will fix the manifactured housing crisis. without such measures you could build millions of new homes & the problem will persist until there is such an oversupply that the entire housing market collapses under the weight of all the leaverage wasted to maintain the investment gains of a small minority. Of whom virtually all politicians & all their financial backers are in this minority, & there in lies the problem..
Funny that Henry George came up with a clear cut solution to this shit 120+ years ago. Also funny that he suspiciously died 🤔. The solution is converting all property-based taxes to a land value tax calculated from the value of the land itself. Land banking or inefficient land use will be costly, raising rent is decidedly increasing property value and therefore taxes on the landlord.
Replace all the Australian references in this video with Canadian ones, and this video would almost perfectly describe the situation here. Montreal is the only halfway affordable "big" city in Canada, mostly because most Canadians and English speaking immigrants don't want to move to a place where they'll be viewed as second class citizens. Density? Well, we've got large SFH zoned sprawl areas, and cities with condo towers, and not much in between.
The Housing market was ruined in '07, when Rudd allowed overseas interests to buy Australian homes. When Coles and Woolworths spent their government funding on land, during CovAIDS, the houses became unaffordable. A corporate government ruined Australia's housing
This. The only reason we have this problem is because in '24 almost every home in Sydney and Melbourne is owned by folks that have never even BEEN to this country. Trust me, I know the market well if people knew how many homes in their suburbs are owned outright by foreign interests they'd shit. Also, your power networks are also owned by foreign entities.
Doesn't help that no one talks about Lands and Titles being privatized, either. The Caymans can tell you how much electricity money goes offshore from Victoria. @@mordie31
Not only that, the government does not want to invest in infrastructures, therefore building housing in new areas is very slow and difficult as roads, sewage, water, public transport and electricity takes decades to setup where new houses can be built. Not only that they chatge ridiculous fees just to be given permission to build a house.
Well said. The other thing not mentioned here are interest rates, inflation and tolls. Sydney is WILDLY expensive. An electricity bill for a 3 person home is currently $800 a quarter.. milk is $6.. interest rates 7% (on average $1.1m homes) and supermarket bills are currently about $400 per week.
As an Aussie working in social housing i think you spoke quite well on the topic. Something touched on lightly is that aussies live on the coast, to elaborate, country towns are behind in infrastructure and overall quality of life, so we all flock towards the metropolitan oceanside for modern quality lifestyles, this also bumps up the prices. You can quite comfortably buy property in rural areas for cheap prices, people just dont want to, and i dont blame them.
@tomm7868 if you are talking big country towns some are expensive, eg. Bendigo, Castlemaine. But there are dozens of smaller country towns that are very affordable. Eg Traralgon VIC median house price for a 3-bedroom is 435k
@@StalesGaming Not paying close to half a million dollars to live out in the sticks with nothing but a pub and a bakery for entertainment. Country people wear thin real fast.
Hobart is becoming unaffordable I saw an international student advertise a single bed in his bedroom for $125 per week. SHARED ROOM! This wasn’t even in the city, why live somewhere rural when a bigger city is the same price with better public transport and jobs
I’ve lived in Sydney most of my life and now in QLD. The thing is, people who don’t/ haven’t focused on their money and savings are now struggling. I don’t know anyone who is homeless, my friends take advantage of free education to get a good career, then pay the government back. BUT people who don’t save and expand their career struggle. That’s never really changed and now it’s just on the news imo
The problem is there are many apartment buildings that are empty and more being built - the issue is there have been known cases of buildings falling and being built very poorly - so no one wants to buy and/or risk living in one.
Its not that everyone wants to live in the cities, there is just no infrastructure outside of the cities to enable the same quality of life. No good living in a small town if the nearest hospital is 200km away, the doctor only visits once a week and there are no jobs.
Where are you from??? My husband came to Australia in April 2011 with 700 US$. Today he owned an apartment 20 minutes from CBD with half mortgage paid off. Owned 5 acres of land near Mudgee, owned an apartment in his birth country bought in 2022. Drive a luxury BMW car and go overseas every year. All from hard work mate. He was no university degree or specialised skills, just hard work, mate. So don't trash my city, my country. You are talking shit!!!!! LoL😂😂😂
Yea what’s his debt to equity position he obviously did not pay cash for everything, many people think if someone owns a house it’s theirs it’s not if you have a mortgage on it even if it is $1
Australia prioritises immigrants over citizens. I will be leaving at this rate. On 200k a year and cannot afford a home there is something seriously wrong.
@user-gs3tq6bx2u oh ok so you think it is acceptable to buy just any home even though its out in the sticks extremely far from work? Buy an apartment and lump on ever increasing strata fees along with major building defects? You know I used to build homes for a living and I would not buy any house and land package. This shows you have no idea of true value. I also only just started earning 200k in the last financial year. But that attitude of yours is the whole problem with the housing market, just buy anything for the sake of buying, regardless of whether it stacks up or not. Add on ever increasing rent with having to accept it along with ever increasing bills. Throw away money?? I always keep my mobiles until they are dead in the water and buy them outright, and my shitty service charge went from $25 a month to $55 and you think I am throwing money away? Go look at my tax bill. You think 200k is alot do you? I would probably be better off earning less...
Let me stop you right there. There are still affordable houses in the suburbs. Who wants to live in any city anywhere in the world ? Not me. Once they started charging to park your car in the city that is when you say enough. No Thanks. I have lived in the suburbs most of my life. I did go to the city about 20 years ago. I do not expect to ever "need' to go back there again. So you can still buy a house in the suburbs, maybe not the "best" suburbs but it will be your house and a fine place to raise your family".
This nation is going all the way down. I'm being forced to move due to all of this. I grew up in New Zealand then moved to Australia. Been living here for 16 years. It's crazy expensive. They made houses impossible to afford. They fine commuters like crazy. They're making it very difficult for people to live here. It's all an agenda, joining forces with the US will only bring their downfall.
On four occasions Dom makes it abundantly clear that he is totally committed to Australia having LARGE-SCALE immigration programs. This is because the MORE featherless bipeds you draw into the country is going to propel the economy by virtue of increasing demand of goods and services. He informs us that, he is a “big proponent of economic immigration”, and how this comes to fruition by way of the population of Australia (proportionally speaking) is increasing twice the rate of the US, and 6 times higher than France each year. One aspect of this program that he singles out is with international students: who are classified as temporary migrants - the great majority of whom are hoping to utilise their time here to gain permanent residency. Apropos to this, comes to pass with gloating about the revenue that international students channel into the country to stimulate the economy. Alas, the 1.1 million international students currently in Australia are the key factor with why availability of properties to rent, and why it is that rents are exorbitant. Therefore, because these interlopers need places to live in must culminate with placing extreme pressure on the availability of properties to rent: and this is so in all of the capital cities. This irrefutably means that, collectively, because they are vying for abodes to live in equates to them being responsible with why Australians are paying excessive rents. To demonstrate just how much Australia has OVERDOSED on international students is to point out that, the US, with a population 13 times that of Australia, has just (sic) 1.4 million international students in its dominion, in comparison to its 1.1 million. This means that for the US to have a ‘comparable’ number of internationals students to that of Australia would require it to have at least 13 million. Aside from these interlopers dispossessing Australians from having abodes to live in and, indeed, why rents are between 20-25 more than what they should be, another dire consequence of MASSIVELY OVERDOSING on ISs prevails with them being between 65 percent to 48 percent of 11 of the top 14 universities in Australia. But, of the 1.1 million in Australia, less than 200,000 undertake courses that can be construed as being worthwhile: such as medicine, engineering, architecture and IT. Amongst the remaining 900,000 is taken up with studying business and accountancy (400,000). Also, there are also in excess of 150,000 people in Australia on a student visa enrolled in vocational education and training courses: these courses include mundane spheres such as cooking, and hospitality. As for the rest, there are well over 100,000 foreigners - significantly from the PRC - studying English. And there are also at least 60,000 people in the country enrolled in primary and secondary levels of study. Clearly, the treacherous cohort of politicians - who are acting at the DEDICATED behest of educational institutions, big business concerns, and property developers - are fully prepared to sell their own people out: in order to propel economic growth. Unfortunately, what these low-life cretins don’t care one iota about is the horrible sociological cataclysm that will come to pass in 10-15 years when these re-colonists with no allegiance to Australia will subjugate the host country and people.
Nothing in Australia is cheap, no immigration would be a good start or Denmark policies, Singapore policies around home ownership, etc. australia needs to take some pain again in the short term.
I'm sure many people are going to point it out, but in the video, I call Sydney a capital of Australia. It's not the capital and I'm an idiot. I know. Hopefully, it doesn't ruin the entire video for you, but I deeply apologize to all the proud residents of Canberra.
Well that’s less embarrassing than saying Canberra is the capital.
I'm not sure if it's as easily done, but isn't it possible to rerecord this bit and add it? Or would you use your current views? Either way, might be worth it.
I live in Canberra since 1974 but take no offence at the oops. Sydney should be the capital!
They could build affordable housing, but it's impossible to build affordable housing without hurting the economy. Developers, investors, and home buyers spend billions on those expensive houses. So if the price of those expensive houses were to fall due to an increase in affordable houses, they would not be able to pay back the billions in loans borrowed to build/buy those houses.
Volume is pretty bad on vids. I have to turn my volume to max to be able to hear you properly. Which becomes annoying because of the ads that pop up and blow out the speakers. Not going to even attempt as using headphones because I don't feel like going deaf any time soon. The sound on your vids could be a problem in holding back people from subscribing.
Australia, Canada, New Zealand etc - countries where a foreigner can buy properties and no questions asked. Money laundering on a large scale. Mostly Chinese syndicates own thousands of homes in these countries.
Yeah the right are back in government in NZ and intend to reopen our housing market to foreign investors
Singapore too, foreigners ruin the housing market.
The Chinese own a lot. As they work under one government. While the privateer works for many masters all in competition with each other to no ones gain.
New Zealand doesn't allow foreigners to buy property anymore.
@@yosefgamble5219 a ha not since 2018, but the new coalition government will apparently reopen the luxury housing market of properties worth $2million+ to overseas investors. Another sellout move that’ll cost us in the long term if it doesn’t devastate our domestic housing market quickly that is, i dare say the cost of living crisis has reduced the spending power of locals and savings have been ravaged😩
Lol. Canberra is the capital city of Australia, not Sydney.
We don't care. :) Canberra is anonymous to any stranger out there like me. :) WTH Sydney and Melbourne are the only cities I know from Australia.
@@dhanyrafael Lol. Hey, you're welcome to live in whatever fantasy you want. :)
@@Is_This_Really_Necessaryblud i knew about Sydney and Melbourne but never knew about Canberra 💀💀
I’m Australian and Canberra is a shit hole no one cares about to all Australians, syd and melb are the important cities, Canberra is a mere administrative hub.
Came here for this
Canberra, ACT is the capital of Australia
My biggest regret as an Australian was not buying my first home when I started primary school
A couple years ago I would suggest moving to Adelaide. But it’s tough here now aswell. Although there are torrens title places in the northern suburbs for around $350k. Older places but it’s a start 🤷♂️
😂😂
Same here.. and I grew up in former ghetto of northcote. Why didn’t my parents teach me to buy a house when I was 8?
😂
Mate my biggest regret was not buying one before I was even born
I think the Australian Dream is now being able to afford chesse slices at Coles
Woolies have cheaper cheese. #tip
Spot on mate. Life here is t good anymore its so hard when working my shiteful casual truck driver job. Im getting less work even its truly a dreadful expensive and boring place to be while i watch chinese buy up everything and Indians getting all the work. As they are undercutting of course. Work for peanuts.
I lost a job to Indians a few years back cheaper to hire. In regards to cheese slices I went to buy one of my kids honey and it was 27 dollars for the squeezy tube my wife usually does the shopping I couldn't believe the price hike. Liquid gold
its whats on youth minds at the moment - boredom well, for many years hence the other issues within society@@mrbrown7224
It's incredible the amount of whinging in Oz highest min wages in the world and you can't afford cheese even if you on dole you should be able to it wud be great if the whinging losers cud travel overseas and then come back apologize for being whinging loser people and appreciate what they have
Australian here. He is generally right about most things. He only quickly mentioned tax concessions as an issue but that and government policy in general is the big reason.
The way tax works here for property makes it a huge way to make money. Then combine a dodgy banking system and you end up with a few people owning most of the properties. And if your a rich foreigner, if you buy over 2 million worth of property they will give you a passport.
Then you have government policy and incentives that give people money for deposits. This seems like it helps but all it does is make property prices go up.
When they had the covid lockdowns, they also stopped homes being built. So basically about 200,000 homes weren't built over those 2 or 3 years. Then they opened the borders back up and prices went through the roof.
Finally, our housing minister for the government has 11 investment properties. Obvious conflict of interest as there's no way she will every do anything to bring prices down.
Bill Shorten had grand plans for housing affordability. Australians didn’t want that though.
@@whitneyanders5945 it wouldn't have been any different. His party has always been against tax reforms to make housing cheaper. Their party also owns investment properties. They also want prices to go up.
My local ALP MP owns 4 investment properties
Hello fellow Collingwood supporter, sitting there nibbling on a slice of coon cheese
Yes! And Wealthy foreigners are mostly Asian sweat shop owners that dump their kids here as students to the can later be sponsored in.
Original Aussies should be angry?
Although a big country, most of the land is desert and uninhabitable, with a lack of water.
Great video Dom. It is such a shame what has happened - my grandparents emigrated from the UK in 1969 and were able to buy a lovely house in the Adelaide suburbs for peanuts, despite the fact my Grandad was a welder on a modest wage. Nowadays someone in his position probably wouldn't even be able to afford to rent a decent house!
Like you say, Australia either needs to build densely - ie lots of apartment towers in the cities - or build new settlements from scratch, otherwise the situation will become completely unsustainable. It's similar in New Zealand.
Nowadays, trade people charge a lot and earn a lot. Many trade people do not pay the right share of their tax since they charge cash for jobs. In Australia, doing some blue collar jobs earns much more than average employees.
Now we have mass migration of third world peasants - it's completely unsustainable even if you build high rise apartments. Australia can't sustain these numbers and is becoming a third-world country. More and more people will end up living in tents.
@@ningsiyou Yup, I'd say a welder doing mining FIFO work in WA, SA or QLD would be pocketing a nice wage for sure.
It's so fucking sad, I remember Sydney in the late 90s and early 00s.... it had its flaws... but there was so much energy in the city and people were genuinely happy with life... nowadays everyone got their head down in their phone... all look angry/stressed.
Im out of Sydney now but that is a perfect description. Look around and its just a wasteland of depressed zombies.
aw sorry, I dont wanna talk to potential schizo strangers like you, most are perfectly happy livng within their own friends and family circle
Leave the rat race in Sydney and come to Perth. Perth is cheaper with higher wages and the added benefit of no toll roads and no pokies.
@@freeman10000 yeah always looks so beautiful. Must come for a visit someday. So bloody far away though 🦘
If you see people stressed you become like that. Go to the country sides and embrace the real Aussies
4:03 Mind you 105K is before tax. Once the ATO extorts a chunk of it as tax (one third at least), what's left is even less than that.
Housing in Australia is worse than bad right now. I’m one of the lucky ones. I’m homeless due to being disabled, unable to work and unable to afford rent, but I am lucky at least to have a roof over my head for now. There are so many more who’ve had to resort to housing their families in tents and many more living out of their cars. Lots of people paying most of their income just to keep their rental. Australia likes to make out that we take care of each other but the truth is that it ignores its most vulnerable and makes getting assistance very difficult and is looked down on by others. Meanwhile the rich capitalise on crises like this and bleed everyone dry and then they complain when people don’t have any money left to “support the economy.”
People shouldn't have to pay these amounts, amounts that take over half of their income to have a roof over their heads, haven't heard of people living in tents in our area in Australia but that doesn't mean they don't exist, they definitely exist, and it should be seen as inhumane to allow our people to have to resort to these measures.
I worry each and every day about will my disabled relative be able to pay her rent. The sad truth is that you either try to tough it out with the rent increases or try to look for any homes that are available for rent:
Which won't be easy at all due to the demand for housing.
@@Vivaerti It’s ridiculous. I was previously paying 50% of my income in a share house. Wasn’t even my own rental. Families are struggling on multiple incomes. Single people don’t even have the dignity to live in a decent house on their own in this country unless they have wealth or someone else taking care of it for them. I’m priced out of affording anywhere on my own, even for the most appalling properties available.
i pay less than %18 of my income for rent and im close to minimum wage and i live in Melbourne cbd i dont see why people pay that type of absurd rent @@chronic_daydreamer
@@kattimate and you're probably 90 years old, still living back in the "good ol days" 😒🙄
On four occasions Dom makes it abundantly clear that he is totally committed to Australia having LARGE-SCALE immigration programs. This is because the MORE featherless bipeds you draw into the country is going to propel the economy by virtue of increasing demand of goods and services. He informs us that, he is a “big proponent of economic immigration”, and how this comes to fruition by way of the population of Australia (proportionally speaking) is increasing twice the rate of the US, and 6 times higher than France each year.
One aspect of this program that he singles out is with international students: who are classified as temporary migrants - the great majority of whom are hoping to utilise their time here to gain permanent residency. Apropos to this, comes to pass with gloating about the revenue that international students channel into the country to stimulate the economy.
Alas, the 1.1 million international students currently in Australia are the key factor with why availability of properties to rent, and why it is that rents are exorbitant. Therefore, because these interlopers need places to live in must culminate with placing extreme pressure on the availability of properties to rent: and this is so in all of the capital cities. This irrefutably means that, collectively, because they are vying for abodes to live in equates to them being responsible with why Australians are paying excessive rents.
To demonstrate just how much Australia has OVERDOSED on international students is to point out that, the US, with a population 13 times that of Australia, has just (sic) 1.4 million international students in its dominion, in comparison to its 1.1 million. This means that for the US to have a ‘comparable’ number of internationals students to that of Australia would require it to have at least 13 million.
Aside from these interlopers dispossessing Australians from having abodes to live in and, indeed, why rents are between 20-25 more than what they should be, another dire consequence of MASSIVELY OVERDOSING on ISs prevails with them being between 65 percent to 48 percent of 11 of the top 14 universities in Australia.
But, of the 1.1 million in Australia, less than 200,000 undertake courses that can be construed as being worthwhile: such as medicine, engineering, architecture and IT. Amongst the remaining 900,000 is taken up with studying business and accountancy (400,000).
Also, there are also in excess of 150,000 people in Australia on a student visa enrolled in vocational education and training courses: these courses include mundane spheres such as cooking, and hospitality. As for the rest, there are well over 100,000 foreigners - significantly from the PRC - studying English. And there are also at least 60,000 people in the country enrolled in primary and secondary levels of study.
Clearly, the treacherous cohort of politicians - who are acting at the DEDICATED behest of educational institutions, big business concerns, and property developers - are fully prepared to sell their own people out: in order to propel economic growth. Unfortunately, what these low-life cretins don’t care one iota about is the horrible sociological cataclysm that will come to pass in 10-15 years when these re-colonists with no allegiance to Australia will subjugate the host country and people.
Its incredible how much canada and Australia has in common
Except for the weather.
That's because the same greedy group is buying up the real estate to use invest properties and not for living in.
@@hermesliteratus882Australia is hot, Canada is cold
🇦🇺 🥵 ☀️
🇨🇦 🥶 🌨
Not "incredible". Same Globalist orchestration.
And yet Canada constantly compares itself to the U.S. when Australia and Canada are very similar in many ways.
Great video -- and so glad the rest of the world is noticing... bring out more such videos on your channel.
For context, I’m a South African Australian American - South African + Aussie dual citizen, US PR/GC holder - of Indian origin i.e., I am an Overseas Indian Citizen (OCI) - I lived most of my life in Australia before permanently moving to the US. My wife is an Indian citizen, an Australian PR and a US PR/GC holder who lived most of her life in the income tax-free UAE.
I think you should hear this from an Aussie who has seen at least some of the world - the ‘awesome’ life in Australia that many talk about is mostly an illusion. 65% of Aussies have their wealth tied up in their third rate houses and 95% of Aussies are in massive private debt - be it credit card bills, home loans, personal loans or illiquid investments. Free medical care in Australia is a myth with most people not understanding what Medicare covers and what it doesn’t.
Freedom is a rare thing in Australia with the Australian Government playing dumb when Muslims took over the Sydney Opera House last December, or when Khalistani terrorists violently assaulted Aussies of Indian origin. Pakistani and Lebanese rape squads have been prevalent in Australia for decades now. State Premiers and ministers are constantly in the news for corruption and nothing is ever done. Politicians even use the police to target their enemies. Australian police in all states are heavily corrupt and next to useless in general.
The cost of living and housing affordability in Australia is another horror story - for instance, I was making over Au$200,000/yr and my wife was making around Au$100,000/yr in regional NSW - we couldn’t see how we would buy a house and bring up our children in Australia. The woke agenda of the US is a problem in Australia and the UK as well - but in typical Aussie stubbornness, no Aussie will talk about it or even admit it is an issue.
As another example, a good mate of mine who is a born and bred Aussie coaches senior executives + is a best selling author and his wife is a corporate coach who is also a bestselling author. Together their income is over Au$250,000-300,000/yr and yet they moved out of Sydney because it was too costly - now living in Brisbane he still borrows his mother’s 20 year old Honda Civic to take his baby girl out because it is unaffordable for him to have his own car while saving up for a family home.
Crime and substance abuse are a problem - ask anyone from Richmond, a suburb of Melbourne where you’ll see junkies passed out with needles sticking out of their arms.
There are entire no-go zones in Sydney and Melbourne that no Aussie would talk about lest the world find out how imperfect Oz actually is…
Australia is an economic basket case where foreign students or foreigners working on H1B visas in the US rush into because they get security in the form of PRs quicker (3-5years) than they would in the USA (20+ years). The US still is a first class economy with top notch schooling for those who are PRs (GC holders) or citizens.
Lots of potential PRs and existing skilled migrants are now leaving Oz, NZ and Canada.
The opportunities in the US are way higher than in most other countries - I am aware first hand about the opportunities in Australia, Singapore, HK, the UK and NZ as well because I received offers from all those countries and interviewed for some roles as well. If someone is a Canadian or Australian citizen, then working remotely from a small city in India, Thailand, Indonesia, Malaysia or Nepal is much more lucrative with a _low opportunity cost_ of leaving Canada or Australia: that person’s Canadian or Aussie passport is worth more than the quality of life in both those countries - ditto for NZ as well.
Not so with the US, despite all its other faults - the opportunity cost of leaving - for PRs and citizens anyway - is _much_ higher. Also overall Americans are friendlier than either Canadians or Aussies. I hope my narrative paints a clearer picture for you and your audience.
Now, I have a question for you although I’ve read your apology to Canberrans - _how did_ you conclude that Sydney is the capital of Oz 🤔 just kidding …I won’t rub it in.
Part of the reason Australians don’t want to live in high density housing is that you end up having to pay not only a mortgage but also exorbitant body corporate fees, it’s like having a second mortgage to pay which can never be paid off.
@@BB-xx3dv yup, you may pick up an apartment for $300k but it’s like you purchased a $500k property cost wise.
Even if you rent, you're still paying the owners' OC fees anyway.
@BB-xx3dv naw... to say that with a straight face during sky rocketing rents.
@@BB-xx3dv Sure, put they're doing that on purpose for a tax advantage. Also, you can't exactly make it your life goal only to rent from people who are changing under their mortgage and OC. Oc fees are ridiculous cheap anyway. It's not like you're not forking out rates and fees on lands.
I feel all your arguments are just focused on being in the weeds and not taking in general about the subject .
@@BB-xx3dv Sure, put they're doing that on purpose for a tax advantage. Also, you can't exactly make it your life goal only to rent from people who are changing under their mortgage and OC. Oc fees are ridiculous cheap anyway. It's not like you're not forking out rates and fees on lands.
I feel all your arguments are just focused on being in the weeds and not taking in general about the subject .
It’s worse than that, people can’t get rentals either and rents are high. The building industry is unregulated, so even if you build there are cowboys out there.
It's expensive precisely because it is regulated. From zoning laws to green laws to taxes - it all adds up.
The problem isn't because it's unregulated; quite the opposite. You clearly don't understand basic economics. Otherwise, yes, rents are high and people struggle to find places to rent.
@@twisterli9177it depends on which part you are referring too? The building industry isn’t regulated. Folks can build multimillion dollar homes that need to be demolished. Waiting over 3 years for their home to be built because of the free money a few years back to improve the building industry. The rental market is having mum and dad rental investors leaving in droves because of the interest rates. Overseas or interstate investors buying all the cheaper established homes. Not enough land being made available to drive up land prices.
Not enough housing on the buy or rent market. Folks offering way above market value on established or rental homes to get a foot in the door.
Even me in my 50’s sold my home to build and I couldn’t get a rental and I’ve been forced to move in with my parents. Which I’m okay with now because I’m saving.
@@KatieB33 how are you defining 'regulated'. I am defining it as government interference into the market. Ask your friend why is it taking 3 years to build. I bet you it is because of council or environmental requirements.
@@twisterli9177I’m in Perth and our building industry is not regulated. We have hundreds of people waiting for builds because of the government subsidies they gave away during covid.
I used to comfortably rent a 3 bedroom house my whole adult life. I'm now 45, employed and sleeping in parks and creeks as I haven't been approved for any housing, with so many applicants and my single income doesn't look good for the future. Admittedly I do sleep in some beautiful places for free, I also pay $500/month for a storage shed and spend a shit load of money on aeroguard!
I feel for you I am also in a similar situation I don't let it get to me. Stuff there shitty $700 a week home
Time to pitch our tents in the parliament house, fuck em good luck stopping 100,000 people from squatting there lol
Move countries
Yet not one Australian will demonstrate - they were born to be ruled. Even during Covid their "respect for authority at all costs" made them dob in Covid deniers in the thousands. Blame yourself Aussies you will still vote for the 2 big parties come election time.
I took me awhile to figure out but it's the lack of housing that's the problem not the incomes. Can we bring back shanty towns and ghettoes
Come to 'stralia, we've got jobs! (bring a tent)
Where?
@@bcgibson22 Pine Gap
what jobs? I'm 22 and have applied for 700 jobs in the last 6 months alone, the jobs are a lie
@@jimbothegymbro7086 only three figures!!?!! Where's your effort, man???!!
@@blackcountrysmoggie I live regional, if I was in one of the cities that would easily be 2000, there's just less jobs kicking about in smaller towns
I'm living in a rural town in Australia and the average home is 15x the average salary. Grocery shopping also costs a fortune. It's horrible and not any better anywhere else.
Grocery shopping in small towns is dismal
What town?
I'm a single Australian who wouldn't mind owning my own one bedroom apartment. There are plenty of these available too, the problem is they are bought exclusively by property investors who can rent them at exorbitant rates and if it remains unoccupied then they can write the loss off on tax and actually make more money. It's a matter of policy change that needs to happen to open it up and create a more egalitarian system. the problem there is that federal politicians themselves are benefitting from this system and are reluctant to change it. Look up our PM's property portfolio if you are interested. It should be considered legal corruption.
So they get help from banks still if the houses arent occupied?
Damn
@@TheReaper1557 i think its more help from the government. Probs meant to “help” landlords who can’t get tenants (maybe) but its created an exclusive market where certain properties (in this case small aprtments) are near impossible to buy because investment groups don’t care how much they spend on them knowing that if they can’t rent at market value (which they deliberately force up of course) then they will get some sort of major write off on tax.
Agree that our politicians could regulate this greed orientated system a lot better , for the benefit of the people.
Not entirely correct. A gorgeous one bedder just sold for $300,000 in Guildford but you would not buy it because Australians are the most arrogant toffee nosed people about suburbs and their WRONG perceived ideas about suburbs.
Im ozzy and single. There is a huge shortage of low cost living options.
In 2006-2008 I suddenly fell homeless following a domestic violence situation, as an ozzy/local single uni student looking for rock bottom housing options in Sydney CBD and along the North Shore (close to work, friends and family) there were dodgy basement rooms (picture a sauna) without windows and electricity underneath mansions for $150 pw vs $160-200 pw shared rooms (2-4 mattresses on the floor) or beds along corridors in CBD apartments, often run by weird gay couples. I looked for months while sleeping in my car and motels. This was over a decade ago but people in this city are cold blooded and depraved.
they just want us to commit suicide
Come and live with me in Edinburgh! 😂 🏴
@Info-qw8vi wtf man. its worse than imagined isnt it. and that was in 2006 -2008
@@Info-qw8viwtf man. its worse than imagined isnt it. and that was in 2006 -2008??
I see these types of videos being made about most countries. Honestly, a lot of people can't afford to live in a lot of places worldwide, and it's sad.
Not really. Western, capitalist countries - Oz, US & Canada have this issue. Many European and Asian countries have much greater supplies of social/affordable/government housing. Singapore has 80%, Vienna 60%... Australia has less than 4%.
@@tahliamobile BBC has produced several videos on people struggling to find housing that clears the margin of 30% of one's income in the UK. The classic metric that 30% of your income going to housing is basically unsustainable in modern metro environments. To meet that metric in a lot of urbanized nations you're looking at an annual salary of roughly $100,000-$120,000 US per year if you want to rent. That's insane, there are countless people are grateful to be working for $60K.
@@tahliamobile so mainly the countries with the largest immigration margins
talking about housing affordability, you should have mentioned Canada. The situation here is worse than Australia 🫤
Immigration laws are being rapidly changed to limit the number of people who can settle in Australia. The ‘golden visa’ system allowed any wealthy migrant to essentially buy their way in to the country, and these people often paid cash for homes, building massive property portfolios which they write off on tax if they own a business. It’s completely ruined Melbourne and Sydney and has jeopardised their unique character and displaced local people. There are loads of dodgy real estate agents helping to inflate prices for their commission fees. It’s a mess and we need to kick out these dodgy operators asap.
They never had a unique character
China out.
India out
The poor out
about time fuck off we are full 2024
Yeah you are wrong about our immigration system it's not mostlyletting in qualified people that we need pretty much every job is on the "skilled migration" list so we are saturated with Engineers and Accountants who end up driving Ubers. Skilled migration is only one part of the system as well we get a lot on student visas who attend fake colleges and then there are parental visas etc. The whole system is a mess.
Yes, the so called "engineers" and "accountants" come from one country. They simply buy their diplomas and qualifications. For a few thousand USD you become a highly qualified doctor....
Also many international students are not awashed with funds, and actually struggle to survive.
@@bcgibson22 the so called international students don't come to Australia to gain knowledge. Once they are in Australia they will do everything to stay there for good. Same happening in Canada and we are talking about students from the same country.
@imaginaryuser tents in our country towns as well which is depressing as it wasn't that long ago that you could rent a place in a country town even on the Dole. If escaping out bush isn't even an option anymore we are truly lost.
@@dx7388 and the name of the country is
Record immigration when there’s already a housing crisis just shown the literal disdain this government has for working class and lower income Australians.
Could also mention the tax system as a reason for excessive home prices - no capital gains tax on homes and overly generous tax concessions on investment properties - won't change with many politicians having multiple properties.
Politicians having multiple properties as investment has a lot to do with the issue in my opinion - no incentive to increase supply (and reduce prices) - something similar is happening in Ireland...
and one of the highest income taxes on the modern world, it only widens the gap between enough to subsist and enough to thrive
No capital gains on your primary domicile, used to be anyway !
There has been no change to the CGT laws on home residence in Australia - they continue to be CGT free.
@@jimbothegymbro7086 That's not how progressive tax systems work you absolute dolt.
I live in Australia and the current rental market has skyrocketed in price. It’s very difficult to find a 2 bedroom apartment that isn’t below $800 per wk
which city??
That's because the same greedy group is buying up the real estate to use invest properties and not for living in. That in turn drives up rents.
@@arezoomaqsoodi7453 Just about everywhere. There is no escape.
There's plenty of apartments cheaper than this. You just choose to live in those areas.
@beaubeau6498 This lady is pretty accurate with the rental she stated. It also makes no sense to live somewhere that entails long travel distances to work and no sense to live in suburbs one feels less safe in.
Australia is one of the most expensive places to live as wages and taxes are high, nothing is cheap there.
If wages and taxes are the problem, then this country would have been unaffordable all along. However, thats not the case at all, Australia was a great, affordable place for decades and decades. Are you from America by any chance??
The taxes are high? You clearly haven't been to Western Europe
On four occasions Dom makes it abundantly clear that he is totally committed to Australia having LARGE-SCALE immigration programs. This is because the MORE featherless bipeds you draw into the country is going to propel the economy by virtue of increasing demand of goods and services. He informs us that, he is a “big proponent of economic immigration”, and how this comes to fruition by way of the population of Australia (proportionally speaking) is increasing twice the rate of the US, and 6 times higher than France each year.
One aspect of this program that he singles out is with international students: who are classified as temporary migrants - the great majority of whom are hoping to utilise their time here to gain permanent residency. Apropos to this, comes to pass with gloating about the revenue that international students channel into the country to stimulate the economy.
Alas, the 1.1 million international students currently in Australia are the key factor with why availability of properties to rent, and why it is that rents are exorbitant. Therefore, because these interlopers need places to live in must culminate with placing extreme pressure on the availability of properties to rent: and this is so in all of the capital cities. This irrefutably means that, collectively, because they are vying for abodes to live in equates to them being responsible with why Australians are paying excessive rents.
To demonstrate just how much Australia has OVERDOSED on international students is to point out that, the US, with a population 13 times that of Australia, has just (sic) 1.4 million international students in its dominion, in comparison to its 1.1 million. This means that for the US to have a ‘comparable’ number of internationals students to that of Australia would require it to have at least 13 million.
Aside from these interlopers dispossessing Australians from having abodes to live in and, indeed, why rents are between 20-25 more than what they should be, another dire consequence of MASSIVELY OVERDOSING on ISs prevails with them being between 65 percent to 48 percent of 11 of the top 14 universities in Australia.
But, of the 1.1 million in Australia, less than 200,000 undertake courses that can be construed as being worthwhile: such as medicine, engineering, architecture and IT. Amongst the remaining 900,000 is taken up with studying business and accountancy (400,000).
Also, there are also in excess of 150,000 people in Australia on a student visa enrolled in vocational education and training courses: these courses include mundane spheres such as cooking, and hospitality. As for the rest, there are well over 100,000 foreigners - significantly from the PRC - studying English. And there are also at least 60,000 people in the country enrolled in primary and secondary levels of study.
Clearly, the treacherous cohort of politicians - who are acting at the DEDICATED behest of educational institutions, big business concerns, and property developers - are fully prepared to sell their own people out: in order to propel economic growth. Unfortunately, what these low-life cretins don’t care one iota about is the horrible sociological cataclysm that will come to pass in 10-15 years when these re-colonists with no allegiance to Australia will subjugate the host country and people.
Come to Brazil and then you will see what are real high taxes
@@OzPozzy278the taxes are indeed high here, massive taxes on everything !!😮😮😮😊😊
It’s a bit of topic but Melbourne and it’s greater metropolitan area where property prices have skyrocketed as a city compared to the 80’s-90’s is an utter disgrace in so many ways. Go into the CBD doesn’t even feel like OZ. Back in the day people just seemed so much happier in general, kids in the streets playing, less traffic and generally a feel good vibe. Now parents are stressed out of there minds trying to keep up with the jones, traffic congestion is out of control,you barely see kids outside anymore, general demeanor of most people borders on depression and it’s become a soulless city in so many ways and woke beyond belief.
100% correct. It's awful
I do believe that people have a right to immigrate here, but we have taken on too many people that we just cannot accommodate. Not to mention that people can buy homes and apartments here even if they have not stepped foot into the country.
Could it be that the Kalergi plan is not a conspiracy after all ?
Sounds like many cities in England , were many parts of towns and city's look like the third world
One of the main problems are developers. They are allowed to do as they please and they hold land and stall releases for years to push up price of land which cuts availability. On average you are looking at around $400,000 for a 400sqm block in any outer suburb of Brisbane, which is cheaper than other major cities. And now that Melbourne and Sydney is so expensive everyone is selling up and moving to Brisbane because they can buy cheaper here and still have money left over from their sale. This allows them to offer more for homes/property’s in Brisbane region so it prices locals out of the market and pushes up prices.
Brisbane is already more expensive than Melbourne, in couple of years the property will be cheaper in Melbourne than in Brisbane.
One shop gets knocked down. High rise apartments gets built. Then chen and khan fills them up and then your a stranger and no longer belong.
@@jeanvonbarberode2377the same is happening in Adelaide
Brisbane is way more expensive now as a result. And theres alot of poor quality homes...broken asbestos, gas leaks and X flood homes. Ie all your clothes will turn moldy.
china needs to be banned.
To make matters worse in Sydney, Some people have resorted to buying a mobile home/rv or caravan, to get out of the housing crisis. But there's a law preventing anyone from "freecamping." Unless you have a paid site, or find a freecamp site ( which isnt easy, they are usually located quite far from any town or city) it is illegal to park and stay in your van overnight. If caught, you will be asked to move and could or will be prosecuted.
Yep. It's not at all a free country. Closer to an open air prison nowadays.
I live in a rural city, people are advertising SHARED ROOMS for rent. Having to share house is fine, sharing rooms with a stranger… idk
Yes, but these people have lives and jobs in these areas. If they were to move out west without work or income, I can't see how that fixes anything.
@@elja7659I know this comment is old but this is beyond sad. I’m stateside in Florida and people are renting the RV in their backyard for at least 1,000 in a hurricane prone area. At least the mobile homes are strapped in up to category 3 hurricanes.sharing a room with a stranger is insanely unsafe. Even the same gender isn’t safe. Maybe if it was a close friend I would consider it if we had to.
@@ravenhairwitch78I will share with the right lady
People, working full time jobs , live in tents or cars in the town where I’m from. Lucky country we live in.
Where and how? Even immigrants aren't living that bad.
On four occasions Dom makes it abundantly clear that he is totally committed to Australia having LARGE-SCALE immigration programs. This is because the MORE featherless bipeds you draw into the country is going to propel the economy by virtue of increasing demand of goods and services. He informs us that, he is a “big proponent of economic immigration”, and how this comes to fruition by way of the population of Australia (proportionally speaking) is increasing twice the rate of the US, and 6 times higher than France each year.
One aspect of this program that he singles out is with international students: who are classified as temporary migrants - the great majority of whom are hoping to utilise their time here to gain permanent residency. Apropos to this, comes to pass with gloating about the revenue that international students channel into the country to stimulate the economy.
Alas, the 1.1 million international students currently in Australia are the key factor with why availability of properties to rent, and why it is that rents are exorbitant. Therefore, because these interlopers need places to live in must culminate with placing extreme pressure on the availability of properties to rent: and this is so in all of the capital cities. This irrefutably means that, collectively, because they are vying for abodes to live in equates to them being responsible with why Australians are paying excessive rents.
To demonstrate just how much Australia has OVERDOSED on international students is to point out that, the US, with a population 13 times that of Australia, has just (sic) 1.4 million international students in its dominion, in comparison to its 1.1 million. This means that for the US to have a ‘comparable’ number of internationals students to that of Australia would require it to have at least 13 million.
Aside from these interlopers dispossessing Australians from having abodes to live in and, indeed, why rents are between 20-25 more than what they should be, another dire consequence of MASSIVELY OVERDOSING on ISs prevails with them being between 65 percent to 48 percent of 11 of the top 14 universities in Australia.
But, of the 1.1 million in Australia, less than 200,000 undertake courses that can be construed as being worthwhile: such as medicine, engineering, architecture and IT. Amongst the remaining 900,000 is taken up with studying business and accountancy (400,000).
Also, there are also in excess of 150,000 people in Australia on a student visa enrolled in vocational education and training courses: these courses include mundane spheres such as cooking, and hospitality. As for the rest, there are well over 100,000 foreigners - significantly from the PRC - studying English. And there are also at least 60,000 people in the country enrolled in primary and secondary levels of study.
Clearly, the treacherous cohort of politicians - who are acting at the DEDICATED behest of educational institutions, big business concerns, and property developers - are fully prepared to sell their own people out: in order to propel economic growth. Unfortunately, what these low-life cretins don’t care one iota about is the horrible sociological cataclysm that will come to pass in 10-15 years when these re-colonists with no allegiance to Australia will subjugate the host country and people.
I have a friend who works in Melbourne that earns $200k per year.
I live in a small country town in South East Queensland, Australia and it is almost impossible to buy a home unless your a millionaire. And here they even want you to pay a dead minimum rent price of $380 rent a week for some small ran-down dump with no garage place for your car. Even for rent for a decent family home per week is still starting to overtake the weekly income here and that's not even including the costs of food or vehicle running costs. Also Sydney is just the capital city of the state of News South Wales. Canberra is the of Australia.
What I think is funny is that there are towns in Queensland that have car thefts, burglaries, and assaults regularly from the "you know who" people. Yet property owners expect you to pay half a million dollars for the privilege of getting robbed. Dude, if that doesn't cause prices to go down nothing will.
as far as Australia is accepting large number of immigrants, housing crisis may never be solved.
One of our biggest problems here in Australia is that in the 90's, the liberal party decided to "boost the housing industry" by lowering the capital gains tax by half and this lead to many people that had properties to borrow against to buy up more homes and turn them into "investments" aka rentals and because they could use the negative gearing tax offset if the rent wasn't covering the mortgage, rates and bills , it just made it easier for wealthy people to end up with a "healthy portfolio" while being slum lords.
The other issues we have with not being able to build new homes is that most cities (Like Adelaide) have had vacant land and lots of it but the government doesn't release it for development until it's desperately needed. This from of land scarcity is what drives up land prices as "Adelaide cannot expand as there is beach and hills" which was a lie as new suburbs are slowly being released over time but the number of houses are low.
Another problem is urban infill where in most cases an old trust home or whole suburb of government trust homes get replaced with newer homes that are on a smaller lot of land, ie, two 350m2 lots where a 700m2 was but this has caused many issues from effectively doubling the number of households, one issue is that the utilities can't handle the extra loads but nor can the roads take the traffic and with most of these smaller land lots having larger houses on them it becomes a case of on street parking for most (also that we are way too car centric) so all the curbsides are cluttered with parked cars.
Lastly we don't have enough builders and trades people to quickly build new homes as most old brickies and chipies have now been long retired and while many young people did seek and do apprenticeships, there isn't many companies to work for as many of them went bust during covid and the companies that have survived are barely surviving due to material costs doubling in the past 5 years.
Long story short, in 2002 houses in ADL were only between $140k to $250k in inner city suburbs, Unley had places going for $450 ~ $600k (rich suburb). 20 years later and those prices have more than tripled with most inner city homes fetching $800k+
I'm kinda shocked old mate didn't go into the Investment properties saga, "negative gearing" kills the career of any politician that mentions it
Great summary. Well on the way to a banana Republic. Tragic
To make matters worse, the building codes for high-density high-rise apartments are quite inadequate to ensure quality built. There are news of cracks, leaks, and other building defects reported on recently built apartment blocks, so potential home owners are weary of buying apartments, making stand-alone houses even more expensive.
That's how I feel as a American. Lots of new stand alone houses suck too. But renters have so few rights and nosey neighbors in apartments is not attractive.
Honestly feels hopeless either way you look at it.
But Net Zero has soared Basix requirements by at least $30 to $50,000 per average new build.
In the late sixties, I lived in Sydney, and house prices were ridiculously low. One could choose from three types of houses: fiber, wood, or brick. The price of a fiber house was around A$20,000, a wooden house was priced at approximately A$25,000, and a brick house cost about A$35,000.
In 1964, University of Sydney Professor of Political Science Donald Horne wrote, "Australia, a first rate country run by second rate people..." This is still the case. 1970's Highest wages/cheapest Electricity in the world, NOW, Highest wages/most expensive Electricity in the world. Venezuela of the South Pacific (instead of being The Norway of the Southern Hemisphere) here we come.
Professor Horne was SO right.
What Vice Chancellor (of Canberra University) Horne actually wrote was, “Australia is a lucky country run by half rate people who share its luck” - sadly most bloody Aussies don’t know where the phrase lucky country originated 🤣
The Norwegian people though have those two trillion-dollar sovereign-wealth funds!
Stupid people running down a great country!
mainstream media. won't ever talk about this
They do talk about this
The smartest thing that should be on everyone's mind right now should be to invest in different streams of income that are not dependent on the government. Especially with the current economic crisis around the world. This is still a good time to invest in gold, silver, and digital currencies (BTC ETH...).
I'm in a similar situation where should I look to increase income? Do you have any advice? What did you do? Thank you
Well explained. Financial education is indeed required for more than 70% of society in the country as very few are literate on the subject, thanks to Mrs Charlotte Walsh the lady you ones recommended
She's a licensed broker here in the states.
Sounds familiar, I have heard her names on several occasions.. And both her success stories on wall street journey!
Wow.. I know her too she is a licensed broker and a FINRA agent she is popular in US and Canada she is really amazing woman with good skills and experience
Wow, exact same as here in Vancouver. City zones for single family homes only, supply of apartments is tiny and there are bidding wars for places to live
That's because the same greedy group is buying up the real estate to use invest properties and not for living in.
Yep, here you have huge amounts of people go to a rental viewing and people offering more than the advertised rent to get ahead of competition to get a place to live.
and when large scale apartments are built in Aus, they are not affordable and basic they are top of line luxury, way too expensive..
Dude I used to live in a suburb in Brisbane the one Chinese trustie owned 250 homes in that suburb. This is repeated all over the country. We need to stop overseas investment in the residential sector until we catch up.
How's about stopping it forever. Look after those already living here sheesh.
That is outrageous. I'm not against investment properties, but to buy so many, and they're sitting there when a family can be housed seems criminal. Foreigners can't buy homes in China, so I don't know why it's unregulated the other way around.
Nonsense, there are very large extra charges on non citizens owning property including land tax on every property
looks like you are part of white supremacy group that feel it's ok if the foreign investors are white europeans.
@@chigasaki06 yes you can buy home in china. u just poor ass kid. btw buying home in china is categorised as foreign investment and eligible for Permanent Resident visa in China. But if you can not afford $1m property in Australia for 30 years loan, you won't be able to afford $3m property in China for 5 years loan.
Now the Australian government wants to ban caravans on private property in the middle of a housing crisis. Nice....
That's a left wing Govt for you 😂..
Government concessions for investments in housing contribute to the high cost of home ownership and rents in Australia. Unfettered migration to Australia doesn't help either. There are still many people who can afford to live in Australia. Those who own their own homes are mostly doing okay. People on very high incomes are doing fine. Politicians are comfortable with their incomes.
The people who are really hurting are those on low or fixed incomes and those who are renting.. We can't fix the housing crisis until greedy investors realise that they shouldn't self-aggrandise at the expense of others in the community.
I earn 6 figure salary and still can't afford to live there
You need someone to teach you how to budget.
I earn a 5 figure salary and can easily afford to live here in Australia.
@AussiePom good for you. Look at the news
@@vdan2879 don’t watch the news, your life will be instantly better
If you are still living here then you can afford it
I heard on the radio the other day that the Average person earns approx 60,000 per year, and for someone to confortably live in aus they will need to earn atleast 150,000 a year... Really opened my eyes when i heard that on Nova...
I'm managing at the moment, but won't be for long if it keeps getting worse. I'm not on a very high amount, about $28 an hour and only work 37.5 hours a week. My brother and I bought a house about 4 and a half years ago before it got really out of hand, lucky we did because if we had to do that now, we'd be screwed.
The trick is really easily fixable. It is all a marketing trick. Just take the Netherlands as an example, it is one of the most densely populated countries in the world, but with the best infrastructure in the world. Build a new city with European, Dutch-style infrastructure that is easily walkable and has great public transport, and stores, and shops on every corner, and do the marketing trick, so everyone will love to live in such a city. The supply will go up, and the demand for houses will go down. And trust me, I have lived in Europe (The Netherlands) and I have lived in New Zealand/Australia, it is 100% easier to live in a dense city, especially in a European (Dutch infrastructure) city. Walkable, likable, with great public transport and with shops on every corner. And a lot od squares. People will love it. Cheers.
🥂🍾❤🫖☕tea? 🍻🍺cheers ! Lovely & innovatively moving, emotionally with the feeling of confidence of a much needed breath of airring the perplexing problem as matter of factly quickly solved🤝on a positive 🎵 note ! Bravo💐& if correct then...one can only wonder why not ...? Australia ☀️make it so!!
🙌 God's speed & God Bless🫶
🪨The bush people? 🦘R they without complaints on their origins of Land location and how's about all that 🙄gold lying in the red dirt that's seems hardly yet easily 🫳picked up🧑🦯
💰👝⛏️🪤💛🧭
&🦘HopN-R🥊ing Roos🦘🌏much🦘punch🦂r sting yet lasting🫗drop💧🕳️🔥🌵❤️🔥🌙goodnite.
Yes, and they made cycleways a priority. So private vehicles are greatly restricted. Unfortunately, these idiots in Australia still love their stupid motor vehicles.
The car culture has change for that
Build it and they will come!
I was hearing tons of issues with housing in the Netherlands 2 years ago did it fix?
Also your argument sounds nice but let's be honest. It won't happen.
With all respect it just sounds like you fall into the category if people who say what should happen rather than the what will actually happen. I'm not disagreeing with you on how that would probably be beneficial. It just won't happen. You can support something while acknowledging the flaws.
Basically the way I understand it is this, any 1st world English speaking country wether Canada, Ireland or Australia you will have to work like crazy to live in.
So if your determined to not change your language and have safety your going to have accept these things. So basically with house prices so expensive in these countries you gonna have to just pick the spot you like the most and stay there.
Nope! That's because the same greedy group is buying up the real estate to use invest properties and not for living in so anywhere where they allow foreigners to buy up swaths of land and homes purely for speculative purposes, this will happen.
Canada has now grown a pair and has blocked foreign buyers until 2028. Of course buyers from that greedy nation have screamed racism. Shocking and ironic but more arrogant than anything that they claim they are the only ones being blocked from buying when Americans and everyone else is also blocked unless they actually plan to move into the country and live there.
I emigrated to Australia in 2000 and for a while it was amazing, perfect even. Things changed. From around 2010 Victoria became increasingly hot in the Summer and finding a place to live difficult. In the end I sadly returned to the U.K due to not being able to afford a home. You could say that housing affordability ruined my own personal dream, however I am clearly not alone.
On four occasions Dom makes it abundantly clear that he is totally committed to Australia having LARGE-SCALE immigration programs. This is because the MORE featherless bipeds you draw into the country is going to propel the economy by virtue of increasing demand of goods and services. He informs us that, he is a “big proponent of economic immigration”, and how this comes to fruition by way of the population of Australia (proportionally speaking) is increasing twice the rate of the US, and 6 times higher than France each year.
One aspect of this program that he singles out is with international students: who are classified as temporary migrants - the great majority of whom are hoping to utilise their time here to gain permanent residency. Apropos to this, comes to pass with gloating about the revenue that international students channel into the country to stimulate the economy.
Alas, the 1.1 million international students currently in Australia are the key factor with why availability of properties to rent, and why it is that rents are exorbitant. Therefore, because these interlopers need places to live in must culminate with placing extreme pressure on the availability of properties to rent: and this is so in all of the capital cities. This irrefutably means that, collectively, because they are vying for abodes to live in equates to them being responsible with why Australians are paying excessive rents.
To demonstrate just how much Australia has OVERDOSED on international students is to point out that, the US, with a population 13 times that of Australia, has just (sic) 1.4 million international students in its dominion, in comparison to its 1.1 million. This means that for the US to have a ‘comparable’ number of internationals students to that of Australia would require it to have at least 13 million.
Aside from these interlopers dispossessing Australians from having abodes to live in and, indeed, why rents are between 20-25 more than what they should be, another dire consequence of MASSIVELY OVERDOSING on ISs prevails with them being between 65 percent to 48 percent of 11 of the top 14 universities in Australia.
But, of the 1.1 million in Australia, less than 200,000 undertake courses that can be construed as being worthwhile: such as medicine, engineering, architecture and IT. Amongst the remaining 900,000 is taken up with studying business and accountancy (400,000).
Also, there are also in excess of 150,000 people in Australia on a student visa enrolled in vocational education and training courses: these courses include mundane spheres such as cooking, and hospitality. As for the rest, there are well over 100,000 foreigners - significantly from the PRC - studying English. And there are also at least 60,000 people in the country enrolled in primary and secondary levels of study.
Clearly, the treacherous cohort of politicians - who are acting at the DEDICATED behest of educational institutions, big business concerns, and property developers - are fully prepared to sell their own people out: in order to propel economic growth. Unfortunately, what these low-life cretins don’t care one iota about is the horrible sociological cataclysm that will come to pass in 10-15 years when these re-colonists with no allegiance to Australia will subjugate the host country and people.
right
They should measure the amount of investment properties that are also deliberately left empty, which also adds to the problem and is a symptom of getting better return on the housing market vs the equity and bonds market.
Exactly
There are SO MANY luxury homes along the Gymea Bay area EMPTY..and if the Cnts don't get their 2k pw rent then they don't want tonrent it out!
It's fking messed up! I bet Obama owns a few and Scomo n Albo too
Chinese land banking.
I’m happily living in an apartment complex in Melbourne (8 years) the problem is local councils knock back new builds due to complaining NIMBYS. Very selfish IMO where do these people want the growing population to live, tents?
They want them anywhere BUT NOT NEAR ME!!! Seriously though, is NIMBYism in Australia also tinged with racism like it is in America?
That's because the same greedy group is buying up the real estate to use invest properties and not for living in. NIMBYs are now infiltrated by these foreign investors solely to artificially raise surrounding property values. GREED is the real problem.
NIMBYs! ..i.,
@@andreaslind6338 > Seriously though, is NIMBYism in Australia also tinged with racism like it is in America?
Partly, but it's not so clear as there are no exclusive gated communities here or mass relocations to segregate and avoid Blacks for example. NIMBY racism however happens en masse as policy. In Sydney, many First Nations people were relocated out of the city by the Howard Government for the Sydney Olympic Games, and elsewhere it is very serious e.g the Northern Territory Intervention and abduction of children and relocation of whole communities to get access to uranium. In the city, I'd estimate 1 in 8 people here are racist, whether they consciously act on NIMBYism probably not all though each district has certain tolerances and intolerances. e.g. Sydney CBD and surrounds is reasonably pro-Chinese and pro-Asian but anti-Indigenous and I suppose anti-Islander (I have never met an Islander living in the city). 1-2hrs North West in the Blue Mountains region there was a history of freed convict land owners and racial violence (genocide), and I hear bigoted friends mention "Arabs", "Afghans", and "Mexicans" (likely media influenced - Republicanism/Trumpism). But should an ethnic family move into such a semi-rural area it may trigger NIMBYism, usually only if neighbours feel the new resident is cramping their 'quality of life' or standing out unacceptably. 1-2hr South to the Cronulla area there's been a more recent history of race riots, with Australian flags on windows and cars. I have worked and passed through these places and never seen any First Nation people, anyone dark-skinned, obviously coloured or ethnic, wearing Middle Eastern or non-European clothing in these places.
@@Info-qw8vi thank you for such a fair, thorough, enlightening and deep answer.
Living in Australia, is painful.... we have (According to my mother whom I live with) $6,000 a month, and my poor mum who is working three jobs and considering a fourth can barley stomach it....
Soon I will be old enough to help too, only about... a few years...
How does your mum have 3 jobs I can’t get even 1.
Australia is outrageously expensive to live.
It's not just housing that's crazy expensive.
Even things that were cheap are now expensive.
I cant wait to retire and leave.
Allowing money laundering or big money from China does not help.
Spot on.
Why is it China's fault?
I believe china is number one investors in canada
@@devinfraserashpole4753
Our problems are virtually all due to crooked chinese. Get them out, vet them for CCP affiliations.
@@devinfraserashpole4753 "Allowing" refers to the Australian government. China is a lost trust country/culture, and they have little respect for Australian laws.
purchased my first home in 2010. had 2 car loans, and a personal loan on top of that. could still afford to save a very small amount to go on holidays, and able to pay bills on time. slightly tight but manageable. i had full health insurance and all other costs. now I've been homeless for a year, cant afford full health insurance, cant even afford the gap fees afterwards to use it much. always late on one bill or another and just shuffle around on extensions and payment plans. barely making it week to week even still. income in that 13 years has barely changed and at times gotten lower, but the cost of living and absolutely everything has just skyrocketed. cant save money, cant do holidays. we can seldom even do something nice for ourselves as everything is going to basic essentials. this country has us drowning.
Become a traffic controller they earn big bucks
@@NakaidaBeauzec they really dont
@@bassdgod1And probably not worth the health consequences breathing in fumes all day
I live in a caravan on the street in an industrial area of Melbourne. 1 minute to work. I spend 25 a week on diesel . I am happy. I can move where the jobs are
You and me both, fck the banks,government ill keep my money
I do hope your warm and comfortable in the caravan mate. I've done it myself. Although I wasn't set up very well. I have no hope of ever owning a house. I have no hope for a bright future. Times sure are tough. Stay well.
Sad but least you're having a crack.
Your solution will work until it gets very popular, then oppressive legalities will enter the picture .
it is illegal in Australia to live permanently on the boat or in caravan, even on your own land. Australia is red taped from every corner to make sure the property ponzi scheme goes on
We got a house 5yrs ago,Gold coast Australia the house is now double in price in 5yrs what a joke.
Same, my house has doubled in less than 5 years. In Adelaide.
Same here in Perth.
Same here in western sydney
Technicaly Canberra is the capital, but really...
Anyways despite this, as an Aussie it's become ridiculously expensive to live. I'm on a six figure salary, supporting a wife an 2 dogs, and we sometimes have to go without essentials during the week.
Try buying in bulk during sales.
Australia has a very manageable problem when it comes to a wealthy Rio Tinto / BHP / USMIC stock owning, property investor class that inhabits mostly acreages in bushy, hilly, leafy outer suburbs, 15km+ out of the CBD. Making these people's lives a living hell would be surprisingly easy if Aussies on Centrelink ever grew a brain and realised living on the street or a tent on $300 a week sucked. In fact, it's just a mechanism to keep you pacified.
To any Brisbane based tent dwellers interested, especially if unemployed, there is a nice area in PULENVALE called McCASKILL ROAD PARK. It's located next to an IGA and the HITCHING POST BAR + GRILL, where you have facilities. The Park has equipment that can be used for exercise.
Good for you mate!
Oh you have no idea.. there's rich people buying up blocks of land and putting pop up or as you'd call them trailer park houses on tiny plots and selling the house to boomers with monthly land leases, and when they pass on, the house and land is given back to the rich land owners to be sold onto the next person. I want to leave Aus as I can't afford a house here anymore it's just depressing.
Unfortunately you may find it hard to find anywhere else NZ is the same golden visas massive immigration high rents and house prices to make you a slave till death.
i've been thinking of moving as well since the forced lockdowns in 2020 - but where to go? most countries are in the same boat.
2023 had an immigration of over 700 000 people. That's 1 in 36 Australians moving here in one year. Madness!
They hate us
You can thank Labor for that
Yeah they wanna grow the population to get more taxes but they don't care if we have enough houses
A stat I find amazing is 58% of people living in Melbourne weren’t born there.
@@dylham3742 I don't like Dutton, but if he pledges so significantly lower migration, I'll vote for him.
Well explained.
I am in the building industry and have matched my prices to the value of houses.
A 40% increase in charge since covid. People might complain but I tell them to pull out the huge equity they have made from their house.
People here are so stupid. They think they can have their cake ( million dollars home) and eat it too (cheap labour). Everyone has to pay for shelter and they will pass that cost on.
"Australia the great Ponzi"
when house prices outgrow wages someone is getting paid too much, but if you can be greedy and get away with it, why not?
I agree with you that no one can afford to live in Australia anymore.
As an alternative, what about jolly old England/Ireland in Europe, may I ask? 🤷
May I remind you of the fact that here in Singapore, a tiny island with 6 million souls lives like sardines in a can, where else in nearby vast bountiful Australia in Asia-Pacific which is ten thousand times 10,000 bigger with a mere 27 million inhabitants.. A similar situation in tiny and packed Japan, which is running out of space and land. Do you know that their living room and bedroom are the same place, and that most Japanese people sleep in their living room?
@@knowledgeispower8625 Slavery, Colonialism and Colonization are all evil things done and benefited by evildoers.
Europe for Native Europeans,
Africa for Native Africans,
America for Native Americans,
Asia-Pacific for Native Asians-Pacific islanders.
By the way, many thanks for the insightful informative multi-page comment by 'Lonely Alaskan' at, "Complete History Of Indigenous America Before Colonialism", on RUclips.
@@truthmatters5170 "Complete History Of Indigenous America Before Colonialism": ruclips.net/video/z9SMN59vsGY/видео.htmlsi=QZ4aX9jmUdrbRoYL
"We're still here ... We are not going anywhere." - Native Americans 😔
As a Native American myself I felt heartbroken to my ancestors when I saw this. As I learn more of people's past I understand their pain everyday.
The two most sacred Christian doctrines are,
- Thou shalt not kill,
- Thou shalt not steal 😔
Also a great many thanks for that supremely informative multi-page comment by Lonely Alaskan at, "Complete History Of Indigenous America Before Colonialism", on RUclips.
@@hellyeah7403 We feel your pain, your emotions and your silent message to the world. You are not forgotten and will never be forgotten. 🙏🤷
The land is the most valuable thing because there's no more land left in the world.
Man's greatest enemy is himself. Greed is an animal. Greed is a major driving force behind Genocide, Slavery, Colonialism and Colonization which are all evil things done and benefited by evildoers.. Greed is behind everything that is bad. Those with no remorse or empathy for others who are greedy are the most cunning. They leave trails of debris, through Genocide, Slavery, Colonialism, Colonization, Imperialism., no matter where they go.. Whenever they left, they left it in strategic violence and tension.. It's such an evil world we live in. 😔
Too much of Australia is barren wasteland, and with soaring immigration, home prices are insane, and anyone under 40 can't afford a house
Much of the land is exactly the same as the brains and heads of peoples that manage it. Although the land is harsh it isn't toxic to everybody.
Most of Australia isn’t waste land . You most likely haven’t see our deserts to know .
I live in Adelaide Australia and the housing affordability is pretty bad here.....not as bad as Melbourne or Sydney but bad enough that many young people have given up hope of owning their own home. And if they did scrape enough money for a deposit for a home theyd be under mortgage stress for the next 30 years. New homed are not only a big rip off but made of poor quality. Rents are unaffordable for many....if youre luckily enough to find rental accommodation to fit your budget. Bottom line is, Australia is a rip off country. if you got money left in your pocket after pay day then they think youre getting paid too much. Cost of living outpacing wage growth. 30 years olds still living with their parents. few Australians have children because they simply cant afford them. thats why we have mass immigration from the 3rd world which is changing the demographics of the nation. Australia is the luckier country, not the lucky country. If youre rich you'll love it.
Too right, lived here in Adelaide for almost my whole life and it was once a very affordable place to buy and live but no longer. I studied for many years at Uni and TAFE to end up with terrible employment opportunities here but ended up staying due to family. I have a mate who moved here from Canada a few years ago (originally from UK) and has a high paying job... He bought what I'd consider to be just a normal house in a decent beachside area and it was 1.6 Million Dollars. His mortgage is massive. Seems everything in Australia has gotten far worse since the 'health crisis' too.
The mass migration created the problem and not the other way around.
Many people from the US, Australia, NZ etc. now move to Mexico. Great weather, opportunities and lower cost of living. Check out Mexico City for starters…
We can really blame John Howard and the liberals for setting up an unequal market by cutting the capital gains tax in half and making negative gearing so easy to utilise so that anyone that had capital could become a future landlord and just get the tenants to pay the mortgage off.
Now we live in a dystopian society of slum lords renting shitty housing for crazy prices because there is so much demand.
Adelaide could have expanded a decade ago as there was always new land down south but that's how this market keeps going through the idea of scarcity, now everything is "Urban infill" which is creating more problems than it was trying to solve.
So, because John Howard did this it is now set in stone for eternity? @@ceffydriver
One of the major problems that people have is that they want to be able to afford to buy in prime locations, such as Melbourne, Sydney, Brisbane, etc.
If you really want to buy a house/property, maybe you need to face the reality that you need to look elsewhere. Somewhere that’s within your budget. I’m single and earn just on six figures. I wanted to live in Brisbane but I knew it was out of my budget so I looked elsewhere. I found a place which cost me only 3x my annual salary and is around 120km from Brisbane. Also, the job I have actually pays more than I would be able to demand if I was living in Brisbane too because employers need to attract workers to come and work in rural areas.
I’m not trying to dismiss that the cost of living is just crazy at the moment, but people also need to adjust their expectations. You might have Champaign taste but you may only have a beer budget.
I agree with you for the most part. Aussies are to blame because they can't think outside the 2 party monopoly. When were Australians asked if they wanted to double the population (which is where this is going) Then they go to the polls and do it all over again. Beer is the new champagne in Australia "Just adjust" is not really helpful even though I know your advice is good, most can't do it and I can assure you that out in the rural area's it is pretty bad as well. Houses have doubled where I am in the last 5 years. (3 hours from Melbourne) Unless you have a skill that is really needed you won't find much escape out here or many houses for sale.
That's a hell of a commute.
The benefits of record high immigration are FAR outweighed by the strain it places on the existing housing crisis. Simple solution is to cut it way back until pressure eases, and then slowly reintroduce. The problem is the people high immigration does benefit are the ones making the decisions.
And other infrastructure and medical services.
Although that is common sense, it wouldnt improve our cost of living crisis by much. Because the problem didnt originate with immigration. The problem stems from systematic greed and an unwillingness to regulate the system in a fair way to the average Australian. Example - just look at what Woolie and Coles have been allowed to get away with for so long. (Price gouging the Australian public, ripping off farmers, illegally stifling fair competition)...all done under our politician's watch ... Big corporate are in control, not politicians.
@@eurekaelephant2714 No stop trying to defend immigration. Denmark, The Netherland and now England have come out with studies of people who contribute and their nation of origin. There is no point bringing in anyone who isn't white becasue them and their children do not once contribute they're dependents. Same with Eastern Europeans. Only immigrants from Western Europe, American and Japan actually put in more than they take out.
Canada is identical to Australia with their situations
That's because the same greedy group is buying up the real estate to use invest properties and not for living in.
Same Globalist orchestration.
@trackdusty 👽👽👽👽👽👽👽😡
Do you also have major media/major political parties who won't discuss reducing immigration because those who profit from it are funding their real estate advertising/election campaigns. Not only won't discuss it, but shut down any interview where someone brings it up?
@wallys7444 Yes precisely we do. Infact, some politicians will slip out how immigration is a great benefit for the universities. Which in other words means that they're Profit 4X the amount on international students over Canadian born. They have no intentions or ever express reducing immigrations. They're trying to bring in 100k Ukrainians this year.
I just did an inflation calculation for Australia.
(the RBA has an inflation calculator on its site)
AUD 4,200 in 1970 would be worth AUD 58,000 in 2023.
Average annual inflation of 5.1%.
Based on that logic, average house prices should now be AUD 260,000.
I can understand why the youngies nowadays are pissed.
There are crap run down houses here in the western suburbs of Adelaide selling for 1 million dollars!
Unbelievable.
in 1970 those houses were 2 bedders made of fibro. most of west Sydney didnt even have town sewage. There was no infrastructure like there is today. No internet. Badly connected to Australia and the world. Todays house and 1970's house is not the same.
@@sal78sal
I disagree to some extent.
The inner west of Sydney (eg Newton) definitely has significantly seen price rises since the late 80's. Something to do with the YUPPIES. Remember them? And the terrace houses there are tiny. Similarly, the townhouses of suburbs like Paddington, Surrey Hills and Darlinghurst.
@@RUHappyATMNo YUPPIES... it was high immigration numbers that lead to the increase in, inner city house prices most Aussie's were moving to the outer suburbs back then, to get away from the rampant drug problems back then.
The real inflation rate is the housing price.
Living in australia is a day to day struggle. If you are not well established in this country with atleast your own house don't risk it. It's not worth it at all
What is ur work bro
And there are so many building companies collapsing right now. But to mention unlivable apartments.
That's because the same greedy group that was buying up the real estate to use invest properties and not for living has been caught in their ponzi corruption schemes and that country is in a financial collapse right now. Their second large property developer is in bankruptcy liquidation court proceedings.
And then phoenixing
The older generation Australians who want to maintain the dream of home ownership will increasingly move to the country, especially as they retire. The immigrants who are more likely to adapt to high density housing will create enough demand to rezone suburban areas into high density. Ultimately it's less about the cities and more about the beach. There's beautiful and affordable places in the Australian interior, but they're all long drive to the beach.
I have absolutely no intention of moving to the boring interior of Australia as a older person.
I highly doubt that older Australians want to move country !! closer to services and not further away 😂 totally Incorrect . They will go coastal if anything or large towns with health services
@@user-ReachingForTheStarsWell, the whole point of the article was about lack of home affordability and large towns on the coast are still going to be expensive. I have older (middle aged) relatives who did exactly as I wrote, left an expensive rental in Sydney and moved to small town NSW (Armidale)and a brand new house. They absolutely love it. Have a huge garden. But hey, if you can afford a house in Sydney or the Gold Coast or whatever, that's great. This video was about those who can't.
@@milopbootheArmidale is actually nice. Not everyone can move to Armidale. I will be forced out of Sydney in my old age but your parents missed the boat-lots of CUBs in double bay who bought 20 years ago-your parents sound risk averse, like my mum. In reality Sydney needed more confident CUBs buying property. It’s all old money now.
I'm really much impressed with your personality here always showing us the beauty of the world, your posts are so interesting!
You never own your home outright, you are ownly the title holder of the land not the owner! You still pay annual council rates, land tax , stamp duty and gst. The system is a broken rort!
I want to correct that the size of Melbourne's Urban area is NOT 10000 km2 since the Australian Census strangely counts nearby rural areas and national parks as part of the city (aka Greater Capital City Statistical Areas (GCCSAs) ). The true size of Melbounre's urban area is actually 2400 km2.
The point is the same. Melbourne still has barely half the residents in 7 times the space. All of the area shown in the graphic is built-up with houses.
Are you sure your not equating the "City of Melbourne" as the city of Melbourne? That is, there is the council administrative area of the "City of Melbourne" , a collection of inner city suburbs, & there is the city of "Melbourne" a vast metropolitan area of inner, middle, & outer suburbs, made up of many "city" council administrative regions, such as the "City of Moreland", the "City of Darebin" , the "City of Port Philip", the "City of Melbourne" etc ..
In the graphic used in the video for the metropolitan area of Melbourne, all of that is urban & contiguous, so would very much count as City of "Melbourne", vs the much smaller "City of Melbourne" council administrative area, made up of the CBD & immediate suburbs. Or maybe the "true size" you state is just wildly outdated as "Melbourne" grew by a million people in 10 years before 2018 & has grown considerably since. Many of the previous gaps between suburbs have been filled, new suburbs built, council administrative areas added, & infill density development unleashed..
Just like many population statistics often take 10 years to use new census data in their calculations, so it is with many stats of urban areas globally, where the data used is woefully out of date.. I guarantee you that the "true size" of "Melbourne's" supposed area being 2400 km2 fits into one or more of these errors..
Using Google Maps, the area of greater Melbourne is approximately 2,500 kn2. 10,000 km2 is 100k by 100k - Craigieburn to Caoe Schank and Geelong to Pakenham, including the whole of Port Philip.
@@schroedernz Ok well i see your point.. But that infographic map of Greater Melbourne, which should really also include Geelong, given how it's very nearly joint up, but doesn't. That map of the entire urban area of Greater Melbourne, is all urban. You can drive all the way from Sunbury on the north periphery, to Rosebud on the tip of the Mornington Peninsula, & not leave roads with traffic lights or roundabouts, ie a contiguous urban area.. So the map of London over Greater Melbourne, that still stands.. Maybe the 10,000 sq km figure also includes Port Phillip bay, which would be wildly inaccurate. But that Urban map of Greater Melbourne in the infographic & it's comparison to London still stands..
That area is more than half the size of Kangaroo Island.
Well, as a immigrant myself I think I can safely say that entire economy depending on immigration is not really a health thing to do, and will eventually be the ultimate downfall to a nation even if it might look like it’s working rn.
💯
Sydney is not the capital
Of course not. Clearly, it's A.
We don't care mate.
What are you talking about? Of course it is!
Yes Sydney is a capital city. It is the capital of NSW and there are many capital cities in Australia.
I’d say the Australian property market is primarily fueled by the loose credit policy, negative gearing and capital gain concession.
To a point, yes. The government needs to release more land. Not in capital cities necessarily, but smaller towns just outside the big ones. More investment in infrastructure to go between (better train lines, more stations etc). By not doing so they are artificially inflating prices, and keeping people locked into certain areas for jobs. I would move out of my major city in a heartbeat if that was the case. But too many people are making big profits from the current system and situation - so I doubt it will change in a hurry.
It is not all that - just outlaw equity loans for property and ban real estate agents who propel up prices plus no more than 75,000 migrants per year - problem solved.
The main problem comes down to mass immigration. Simply put, we have nowhere near enough houses for Australians because the government prioitises shoving as many 3rd world immigrants into the country as possible.
Unfortunately Australia needs the foreigners and cant survive without
that's immigration on steroids to consume basic goods.. without immigration all they have is iron ore and flipping property to eachother atr high prices on borrowed money
@@Robinteeken896that’s bullshit told to us by the liberal government
They activatly hurt our wages and housing prices woth each person they let into the country for their cheap labor
Cant afford to live in Australia is extreme, but if it stops ppl coming I support.
The issue is that population growth from immigration has grown too quickly.
500,000 per year is the problem, 75,000 per year is sustainable.
Chinese buyers, have pushed prices beyond local wages, and local parents are funding their kids to compete....
The issue is labor cost is too high to build a cheap and quality house.
I’m 25 and can’t afford to live in a rural area with a full time job that was damn near life threatening
I would need 2 roomates for a 1 bedroom place and even then i couldn’t afford food or my medication
I am going to die homeless because of this shithole of a country
I could literally be homeless in anolafe like denmark and still be far better off than the average Australian
I used to live on the Gold Coast, beautiful place but my rent was $500 per week.
I was lucky enough to buy an old house in a small town, so things are much better for me now. I feel sorry for young families who are stuck in the rent spiral.
$500 is bargin now
I know. When I left 3 years ago the landlord had already put it up to $600. @@Eric-kn4yn
I lived on the Goldcoast 7 years ago paying $ 380 for a 2 bedroom 2 bathroom Townhouse in Mermaid Waters was cheap as chips and my salary was pretty good but now it's very very tough as the rent is up towards $700 a week !
Yes, the landlord put it straight to $600 after I left 3 years ago.@@Eric-kn4yn
That’s not luck, you made a decision.
People have to come to terms that you can’t just live where you want. You can only live where you can afford. It sucks, however that’s the reality we’re all facing.
It is getting a lot worse, very fast. I have been looking for a rental this month and everything has gone up $50 - $150 a week this month alone. Listings keep vanishing then reappearing on rental websites with increased rents, I have seen this happen several times. So many people are showing up to property viewings and everyone is so desperate, they are bidding up the rental price when they submit their applications, many rental websites allow you to do this. I have talked to a few people that are stuck in Airbnb's and paying $150 or more a night and going bankrupt as they can't find a place... This will not end well!
It slowly but surely is worsening each and every day, a day ago our household found out that our landlord wants to increase the rent by $100 soon. We are fortunate that we've already planned and packed some stuff for when we move and already had a solution months ago.
Hoping you find a solution or home.
You forgot to mention the key reason why housing is in such low AVAILABLE supply & why it is so expensive.. The key is AVAILABLE.. That is, there is plenty of construction & has been for a long time. Melbourne should have had a massive OVERSUPPLY of particularly apartments, but also housing, given how much has been built, even accounting for both international & inter-regional & interstate immigration. But the key here is on AVAILABLE.. That is, most of the new housing is for investment purposes, be it for Negative Gearing tax concessions, or to flip at a later date, a store of wealth, or for short term rentals aka Air BNB. If a dwelling is built for investment purposes theres a high chance it is empty, or kept out of the long term sale or rental market. This can be seen particularly in Docklands, a suburb of the inner city CBD, where 90% of all the apartment skyscrapers are empty 90% of the time, & is repeated in many or most of the huge no of apartment skyscrapers in the CBD, in the areas surrounding the CBD, & throughout the entire metropolitan region, even as far out as 30km from the CBD where apartment highrises have been built, ostensibly to increase the supply of housing, but in reality to increase the supply of housing investment.
Houses in Australia are like stocks or crypto first, & prioritised as dwellings to be lived in second.. Melbourne alone built somewhere in the vicinity of 20,000 new apartments in a 10 year period, but yet there is a huge undersupply of housing? There should be such an oversupply that the bottom should have fallen from the apartment market. And many feared it was going to in 2018, when there was 350 tower cranes operating at once across the metropolitan region, more alone than in the entire US, 80% of which were building apartments, from 20m high to 320m high buildings. But yet apartments have not stopped being built. The issue is also what type of apartments are being built, 90% of them arent suited to families, lots of them arent even suited to groups of flatmates. Most of them are suited to Air BNB, storing wealth, or as tax reduction vehicles. Most of them, even the ones that look really nice, are of massively poor quality too, due to the speculative investment nature meaning low margins after high prices for the sections for them to be built on, & many corners cut to maintain developer & investor profits..
All of the same applies to many of the 10s of thousands of houses & units in the outer suburbian periphery as well, with entirely new suburbs consisting of investment properties kept out of the long term market. Reduce the incentives to keep housing empty, such as by an empty housing tax where apropriate, & the housing undersupply will become an actual oversupply over night. Late speculative investors or overleaveraged investors might get burnt, but this will fix the manifactured housing crisis. without such measures you could build millions of new homes & the problem will persist until there is such an oversupply that the entire housing market collapses under the weight of all the leaverage wasted to maintain the investment gains of a small minority. Of whom virtually all politicians & all their financial backers are in this minority, & there in lies the problem..
Bravo 👏
Well said 🤙🏻
Not to mention they`re mostly made of sand and all of them leak around the windows or from one bathroom down to the next.
Funny that Henry George came up with a clear cut solution to this shit 120+ years ago. Also funny that he suspiciously died 🤔. The solution is converting all property-based taxes to a land value tax calculated from the value of the land itself. Land banking or inefficient land use will be costly, raising rent is decidedly increasing property value and therefore taxes on the landlord.
Replace all the Australian references in this video with Canadian ones, and this video would almost perfectly describe the situation here. Montreal is the only halfway affordable "big" city in Canada, mostly because most Canadians and English speaking immigrants don't want to move to a place where they'll be viewed as second class citizens.
Density? Well, we've got large SFH zoned sprawl areas, and cities with condo towers, and not much in between.
So, you have the solution. No immigration, no problem
The Housing market was ruined in '07, when Rudd allowed overseas interests to buy Australian homes. When Coles and Woolworths spent their government funding on land, during CovAIDS, the houses became unaffordable. A corporate government ruined Australia's housing
yep and all the politicians own multiple investment properties, so this aint ending anytime soon
This. The only reason we have this problem is because in '24 almost every home in Sydney and Melbourne is owned by folks that have never even BEEN to this country. Trust me, I know the market well if people knew how many homes in their suburbs are owned outright by foreign interests they'd shit. Also, your power networks are also owned by foreign entities.
Doesn't help that no one talks about Lands and Titles being privatized, either. The Caymans can tell you how much electricity money goes offshore from Victoria. @@mordie31
Not only that, the government does not want to invest in infrastructures, therefore building housing in new areas is very slow and difficult as roads, sewage, water, public transport and electricity takes decades to setup where new houses can be built. Not only that they chatge ridiculous fees just to be given permission to build a house.
And we still have garbage internet in many parts of Australia!
Why No One Can Afford To Live In The East Of Australia Anymore.
Fixed the title for you.
I personally live very comfortably in Western Australia!
Exactly! I have a fabulous home and lifestyle in Hobart.
@@infodaynightconv1445
I met Gina, what a battle axe.
Well said. The other thing not mentioned here are interest rates, inflation and tolls. Sydney is WILDLY expensive. An electricity bill for a 3 person home is currently $800 a quarter.. milk is $6.. interest rates 7% (on average $1.1m homes) and supermarket bills are currently about $400 per week.
As an Aussie working in social housing i think you spoke quite well on the topic. Something touched on lightly is that aussies live on the coast, to elaborate, country towns are behind in infrastructure and overall quality of life, so we all flock towards the metropolitan oceanside for modern quality lifestyles, this also bumps up the prices. You can quite comfortably buy property in rural areas for cheap prices, people just dont want to, and i dont blame them.
So not true, I know a lot of people who would like to move to country towns but can’t afford as well. Prices are up even in country towns.
@tomm7868 if you are talking big country towns some are expensive, eg. Bendigo, Castlemaine. But there are dozens of smaller country towns that are very affordable. Eg Traralgon VIC median house price for a 3-bedroom is 435k
@@StalesGaming Not paying close to half a million dollars to live out in the sticks with nothing but a pub and a bakery for entertainment. Country people wear thin real fast.
@@anguswilliam2141 thank you for proving me initial point 😀
Hobart is becoming unaffordable I saw an international student advertise a single bed in his bedroom for $125 per week. SHARED ROOM! This wasn’t even in the city, why live somewhere rural when a bigger city is the same price with better public transport and jobs
Australia also stopped building new city’s , we have so much coastline but a 10 hour drive of just a few small towns between Newcastle and Gold Coast
I’ve lived in Sydney most of my life and now in QLD. The thing is, people who don’t/ haven’t focused on their money and savings are now struggling. I don’t know anyone who is homeless, my friends take advantage of free education to get a good career, then pay the government back. BUT people who don’t save and expand their career struggle. That’s never really changed and now it’s just on the news imo
The problem is there are many apartment buildings that are empty and more being built - the issue is there have been known cases of buildings falling and being built very poorly - so no one wants to buy and/or risk living in one.
Its not that everyone wants to live in the cities, there is just no infrastructure outside of the cities to enable the same quality of life. No good living in a small town if the nearest hospital is 200km away, the doctor only visits once a week and there are no jobs.
Because it's costly to transport let alone establish infrastructure outside the cities.
Where are you from???
My husband came to Australia in April 2011 with 700 US$. Today he owned an apartment 20 minutes from CBD with half mortgage paid off. Owned 5 acres of land near Mudgee, owned an apartment in his birth country bought in 2022. Drive a luxury BMW car and go overseas every year. All from hard work mate. He was no university degree or specialised skills, just hard work, mate. So don't trash my city, my country. You are talking shit!!!!! LoL😂😂😂
I guess he is fully understanding BRRRR - Buy, rehab, rent, refinance and repeat
Yea what’s his debt to equity position he obviously did not pay cash for everything, many people think if someone owns a house it’s theirs it’s not if you have a mortgage on it even if it is $1
Australia prioritises immigrants over citizens. I will be leaving at this rate. On 200k a year and cannot afford a home there is something seriously wrong.
@user-gs3tq6bx2u oh ok so you think it is acceptable to buy just any home even though its out in the sticks extremely far from work? Buy an apartment and lump on ever increasing strata fees along with major building defects? You know I used to build homes for a living and I would not buy any house and land package. This shows you have no idea of true value. I also only just started earning 200k in the last financial year. But that attitude of yours is the whole problem with the housing market, just buy anything for the sake of buying, regardless of whether it stacks up or not. Add on ever increasing rent with having to accept it along with ever increasing bills. Throw away money?? I always keep my mobiles until they are dead in the water and buy them outright, and my shitty service charge went from $25 a month to $55 and you think I am throwing money away? Go look at my tax bill. You think 200k is alot do you? I would probably be better off earning less...
Just want to rectify that Australia government prioritises money over others
I'm googling french chateu prices because well, it's cheaper than an average house here 😂
I actually think its a good idea lol then airbnb it out on the weekends while you travel europe.
Let me stop you right there. There are still affordable houses in the suburbs. Who wants to live in any city anywhere in the world ? Not me. Once they started charging to park your car in the city that is when you say enough. No Thanks. I have lived in the suburbs most of my life. I did go to the city about 20 years ago. I do not expect to ever "need' to go back there again. So you can still buy a house in the suburbs, maybe not the "best" suburbs but it will be your house and a fine place to raise your family".
They also don’t have many basements in Australia, so there’s no underground condos for sale.
What about Cooper Pedy?
@@harrymason6346 who'd live there seriously!! no jobs or anything!
Serial killers keep houses with basements
This nation is going all the way down. I'm being forced to move due to all of this. I grew up in New Zealand then moved to Australia. Been living here for 16 years. It's crazy expensive. They made houses impossible to afford. They fine commuters like crazy. They're making it very difficult for people to live here. It's all an agenda, joining forces with the US will only bring their downfall.
You didn't move back to New Zealand, here is even worse.
On four occasions Dom makes it abundantly clear that he is totally committed to Australia having LARGE-SCALE immigration programs. This is because the MORE featherless bipeds you draw into the country is going to propel the economy by virtue of increasing demand of goods and services. He informs us that, he is a “big proponent of economic immigration”, and how this comes to fruition by way of the population of Australia (proportionally speaking) is increasing twice the rate of the US, and 6 times higher than France each year.
One aspect of this program that he singles out is with international students: who are classified as temporary migrants - the great majority of whom are hoping to utilise their time here to gain permanent residency. Apropos to this, comes to pass with gloating about the revenue that international students channel into the country to stimulate the economy.
Alas, the 1.1 million international students currently in Australia are the key factor with why availability of properties to rent, and why it is that rents are exorbitant. Therefore, because these interlopers need places to live in must culminate with placing extreme pressure on the availability of properties to rent: and this is so in all of the capital cities. This irrefutably means that, collectively, because they are vying for abodes to live in equates to them being responsible with why Australians are paying excessive rents.
To demonstrate just how much Australia has OVERDOSED on international students is to point out that, the US, with a population 13 times that of Australia, has just (sic) 1.4 million international students in its dominion, in comparison to its 1.1 million. This means that for the US to have a ‘comparable’ number of internationals students to that of Australia would require it to have at least 13 million.
Aside from these interlopers dispossessing Australians from having abodes to live in and, indeed, why rents are between 20-25 more than what they should be, another dire consequence of MASSIVELY OVERDOSING on ISs prevails with them being between 65 percent to 48 percent of 11 of the top 14 universities in Australia.
But, of the 1.1 million in Australia, less than 200,000 undertake courses that can be construed as being worthwhile: such as medicine, engineering, architecture and IT. Amongst the remaining 900,000 is taken up with studying business and accountancy (400,000).
Also, there are also in excess of 150,000 people in Australia on a student visa enrolled in vocational education and training courses: these courses include mundane spheres such as cooking, and hospitality. As for the rest, there are well over 100,000 foreigners - significantly from the PRC - studying English. And there are also at least 60,000 people in the country enrolled in primary and secondary levels of study.
Clearly, the treacherous cohort of politicians - who are acting at the DEDICATED behest of educational institutions, big business concerns, and property developers - are fully prepared to sell their own people out: in order to propel economic growth. Unfortunately, what these low-life cretins don’t care one iota about is the horrible sociological cataclysm that will come to pass in 10-15 years when these re-colonists with no allegiance to Australia will subjugate the host country and people.
@@dijo7086 and Australia is fast catching up to new zealand
Nothing in Australia is cheap, no immigration would be a good start or Denmark policies, Singapore policies around home ownership, etc. australia needs to take some pain again in the short term.