1. Lock Len Brown and John Key in a room until they come out with an agreement to open lots of greenfields and brownfields land to build at least 20,000 affordable dwellings a year for the next 10 years. That's 10 times more than was built in the past 10 years. That deal should include investment from both governments in the infrastructure needed to support those 200,000 dwellings, including transport.
2. Impose an Auckland land tax to help pay for it. That would immediately reduce land prices by 15 to 20 per cent, and remove the incentive for land bankers to sit on land for tax-free capital gains.
3. Introduce macro-prudential controls to slow high LVR lending, including extra capital requirements for mortgage lending and making banks fund all their lending locally through term deposits. These tools are used by Hong Kong, Singapore, Israel, Sweden and Norway.
4. Restrict or control migration so fewer migrants from offshore and other parts of New Zealand are able to move to Auckland. That could include a regional development strategy.
5. Restrict non-resident investment in houses in Auckland, as Hong Kong and Australia have done.
6. Encourage the development of, or build, one or two large-scale pre-fabricated house manufacturers to drag down the cost of building.
7. Launch an apprenticeship training scheme in Auckland for trades staff to build the 400,000 dwellings needed over the next 30 years.
8. Increase the Official Cash Rate to 3 per cent from 2.5 per cent to cool the doubling of lending growth over the past year.
Politically, these solutions will damage the leveraged equity stakes of property owners. But if they are not done, the economic and political damage will be felt for years.
The Government's efforts to restructure the economy to become more productive and less indebted are in tatters. We are again spending more than we're earning and the banks are starting to borrow overseas again to fund the lending growth, putting yet more pressure on the currency and our net foreign debt.
Our current account deficit is blowing out again and a generation of young Auckland families are seeing their home-ownership dreams dissolve in front of them.
Our politicians face a choice. They can change to benefit the next generation and the poor. Or they can cling to the status quo and risk the wrath of the poor and the young.
Debate on this thread is now closed.