^Sorry, Skids, but from a *national* POV that's meaningless. The ratio might not have changed for you, but that's not even close to the national average ratio shift. And no, the folks from the three biggest cities in the country can't all move to Dimboola. Only a very small percentage of people can work favourable angles (high incomes and low house prices in low-demand locations) without the economy collapsing. That's why economists don't care about some bloke on Facebook who's beaten the odds by living on a houseboat on a lake in Tasmania.
There were a few good years from 2014-2019 when interest rates dropped, but they dropped for a reason, i.e., to help economies recover from scarring from the GFC and deflation associated therewith. A brief window in a rubbish economy when everyone was still recovering from the worst financial crisis since whenever was barely a ripple in the pond. Better than nothing, but interest rates don't go to near-zero to stave off deflation for fun; rather, to keep economies on life support while GFC debt overhang was dealt with.
Here's the actual overall Australian equation (Aus Fin Review Sep 2023). It's also crystal clear that higher past interest rates don't come close to bridging that gap, with the proportion of income spent on housing far lower even when interest rates were 17% in 1990 (see:
https://www.datawrapper.de/_/1TwJx/). Furthermore, spending needs make the situation far worse when the decline in support for lower-income earners (including government housing), increase in job acquisition costs and years lost to job preparation (i.e., education and training, mandatory for many more jobs, hence the student debt and later career and earning starts), and distance from employment centres for even potentially affordable homes is taken into account.
Why the odds are stacked against first-home buyers, in six charts
1. Property prices have massively outpaced wage growth
2. The time it takes to save for a deposit is growing … and even if you do buy, it’s harder to afford repayments
3. For those trying to buy, rent is taking up more of our expenses
4. Even if you do manage to save enough, your borrowing capacity is limited
5. All of these hurdles have led to fewer people owning homes than before
6. But if you make the transition and can survive the repayments ... then you’ll probably end up wealthier
https://www.afr.com/property/residentia ... 914-p5e4sl
In 1984, when Bruce brought his first home, the average income was $19,188 while the average cost of a property in Australia was $64,039. This means people needed to borrow 3.3 times their income to afford the average property, according to financial comparison site Finder.
In 2023, by contrast, the average income is $90,896, while the average home costs $920,100, Finder says, which means buyers now have to borrow 10 times their income.
In 1984, a 20 per cent deposit was two-thirds of a year's income. Today, it's just over double.
University of Sydney economist Gareth Bryant says while homebuyers in the 1980s and 1990s such as Bruce were plagued by high interest rates (in January 1990 the official cash rate was 17.5 per cent) and unemployment levels significantly higher than today, the challenges first homebuyers face now are very different.
“Previously it was more of a challenge of income: ‘Do you have enough money to cover your mortgage?’ Rather than actually being locked out of home ownership,” he told Insight.
“Now it’s more of a problem of wealth and actually being able to access the wealth needed to get the deposit.”
He says experiences like Ashley’s are becoming increasingly common among Millennial Australians who are being shut out of the housing market in never-before-seen numbers.
"House prices have increased over the last two decades at a much faster rate than wage increases," he said.
"So we're seeing a structural change where, rather than renting being something that's a temporary phenomenon, people are starting to confront a situation where they'll become lifelong renters."
"Even when [Millennials have] decent jobs and decent incomes, they're finding them locked out of the housing market."
https://www.sbs.com.au/news/insight/art ... /t8y9wgmnh