Until yesterday, housing was one of the major points of difference between Labour and National. Labour had its Kiwibuild policy of building 100,000 new houses over the next ten years - 50,000 of them in Auckland - and selling them at "affordable" prices, while National was keeping to its strategy of simply trying to change the planning rules to encourage the private sector to meet the increased public demand for housing.
Suddenly the National Government has gone somewhat "socialist", announcing that it will embark on a bigger programme of house production under its Crown Building Project. So, why the sudden change of heart? Clearly rising concerns about the housing crisis were threatening the Government's chances of re-election. And maybe the Government realised that the market simply wasn't capable of delivering the much-needed housing.
Unambitious for New Zealand?
There will be very few voters or commentators questioning whether the National Government was right to announce an new state-housing build programme. The question is simply whether the programme goes far enough.
And ofcourse, every opposition party has bemoaned the announcement being "too little, too late".This even extended to National's support partner on its political right: the Act Party's David Seymour said "If the goal is to close the housing shortfall, this is a step in the right direction, but it won't be enough. The proposal will add 25,000 homes when what we need is another 500,000."
The most common reaction to the announcement was nicely summed up in Corazon Miller's Herald article, Is National's housing policy enough?. In this, the increased housing figure put forward by the Government is broken down to get a more realistic idea of what real change is occurring: "Taking into account the 8,275 that will be demolished to make way for these new builds; this would see a net gain to the Auckland market of 25,936, of which Adams estimated between 5,000 to 6,000 would be social housing. However, these figures fall far short of what the SuperCity will likely need as population growth and net migration put greater pressure on the housing market. Auckland has an estimated shortage of around 35,000 homes".
This article even quotes Property Institute of New Zealand chief executive Ashley Church expressing concern about whether the figures announced are enough to keep up with demand in Auckland: "That's not to be sneezed at - but it's a long way short of the 40,000 we need right now."
And the headline in today's New Zealand Herald was probably not what National was looking for: 4200 new affordable homes in Auckland under Govt-run building plan. The article by Isaac Davison calculates that the number of houses sold below the cost of $650,000 - which is the official new government measure of what is "affordable" will only be about 4200, given that National is only promising that one-in-five houses built by Housing New Zealand for private sale would have to be affordable.
The article suggests that the number of state houses, too, won't meet demand: "Housing NZ chief executive Andrew McKenzie said 1700 new state house places would be built in the first four years. At last count, there were 2015 people on the official waiting list for social housing in Auckland, and another 600 waiting for a transfer."
The most interesting and insightful critique of the announcement comes in today's Dominion Post editorial, National changes tack over the housing crisis. Looking at the figure of 26,000 additional new houses, the newspaper says: "This is not a sumptuous number in a city where house prices have exploded and where thousands of young people have given up hope of buying a house and where homelessness is a serious issue. And partly a modest policy is inevitable when National still can't bring itself to mention the 'crisis' word. Even the supposedly 'new broom' minister Amy Adams is still talking coyly about the city's housing 'challenges'."
The editorial could see the significance of the announcement, but was sceptical about the motives: "Housing is the area where National is most vulnerable, and yesterday's announcement is a recognition of this fact. It also represents a softening of National's ideological objections to state house-building and in particular to Housing New Zealand's ability to competently manage a new building programme. If this represents a new and more pragmatic approach to the housing crisis it is welcome. If it is merely the Government doing the least it possibly can to manage the crisis and give the appearance of action, it's not."
And for equal measure, the editorial criticises Labour for being too moderate in its house-building ambitions. But it wonders if the public's horizons have been lowered, encouraging such unambitious policies: "There is a housing crisis, but plenty of voters are leery of the scale of Labour's promises. Can we really afford to build 100,000 houses over 10 years, half of those in Auckland? Nine years of careful and incremental policy changes have encouraged voters to think that a bold plan is reckless. There is still not a widespread feeling that it's time for big political changes."
Similarly - and not surprisingly - the leftwing blog, No Right Turn is caustic about the National's low house-building ambitions, but also makes the point that a U-turn by the Government might still have positive unintended consequences: "by announcing this and conceding the principle that the government must build houses, they've enabled other parties to announce that they will build more of them, and keep them under state ownership. So its not a bad announcement - just too little, and too bloody late" - see: The usual story.