Add to this the fact that the gap between median household income and median house prices has been steadily widening since the 1980s and you start to get a sense of why some might believe that the days of property booms are over.
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But are they? The logical extension of the argument above is that a unique set of circumstances led to our history of boom cycles and that the changes outlined mean that pattern will now draw to an end — so it's worth taking a closer look to see what was going on during each cycle to see whether that position carries weight.
The first doubling of house prices peaked somewhere around 1986 — capping off a decade of volatile change which was mostly dominated by the 'Muldoon reforms' but finished with the even more far reaching 'Rogernomics' economic reforms of the 4th Labour Government.
Inflation was running at around 18 per cent, mortgage interest rates were up over 20 per cent and net immigration showed a negative outflow of around 17,000 people — many of them to Australia.
By around 1996 houses prices had broadly doubled again. The National Government which had been in power since 1990 had largely continued the previous Governments reforms but had also reformed the State Housing market — bringing in market rentals and selling off a big portion of the State housing portfolio.
Inflation had plummeted to just 4 per cent and floating mortgage interest rates, while high by today's standards, were down to around 12 per cent. Migration was still negative with a net 10,000 people leaving the country.
By 2006 — a year punctuating yet another decade of doubling house prices — the Clarke Labour Government had reversed the housing reforms of the previous Government, abolishing market rents but retaining the 'accommodation supplement' which had been introduced, by National, to offset the higher cost of renting.
They also presided over inflation of around 4 per cent and floating mortgage interest rates of around 10 per cent. Net migration for 2006 was now running at a gain of over 10,000 additional people.
By 2016 house prices had broadly doubled again. Under the Key National Government floating mortgage interest rates were down to an historical low of around 5 per cent, inflation was down to an historical low of 1.6 per cent, migration was running at a net gain of over 70,000, and the debate had moved to the cost of housing and a shortage of homes purported to be over 100,000.
My point? That those looking for a common set of factors underlying each boom won't find them. The economic environments which prevailed during the peak of each of the past four cycles couldn't be more different — and the only thing which unites them is the cycle itself, and a doubling of house prices roughly every 10 years.
That economic change is coming is a given. That it will bring an end to the pattern of property cycles of recent decades is far from a foregone conclusion.