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New record for housing starts expected in 2021

 

The Housing Industry Association expects construction of almost 130,000 new detached homes will begin this year. The previous record of 120,000 starts in a calendar year was set in 2018. This forecast is contained in HIA’s economic and industry Outlook Report. Source: Timberbiz

The State and National Outlook Report includes updated forecasts for new home building and renovations activity for Australia and each of the eight states and territories.

“HomeBuilder has delivered. All leading indicators show a record volume of detached homes about to commence construction and this is occurring in almost every location across Australia,” HIA’s Chief Economist Tim Reardon said.

“This has not only secured the employment of the 500,000 people employed in detached home construction, but it will also absorb tens of thousands of workers from across the rest of the economy.”

Mr Reardon said that the extension of HomeBuilder in November was the primary cause of this significant upgrade in forecasts, but the demographic shifts were also driving demand for detached homes.

“Regional locations in many states are showing a larger increase in activity than capital cities as the population moves away from inner city living,” he said.

“The strong conditions for detached homes are in stark contrast to the outlook for multi-units, which will continue to cool. The loss of overseas migration hit the multi-unit sector immediately and the number of new units starts is falling rapidly. The population shock is yet to flow through to detached.”

Mr Reardon said the constraint on building more than 130,000 detached homes this year would be the availability of residential land.

Land development slowed last year when the restrictions were introduced and will limit the number of homes that start construction this year.

“Skilled trades will be in high demand but the slump in apartment construction will see these trades shift to detached home building,” Mr Reardon said.

“The supply chain of building products will be stretched, but many building components are manufactured in Australia including cement, bricks, plasterboard and timber,” he said.

“The increase in manufacture of these building components will also create employment.”

Demand for detached homes had been particularly strong amongst first-home buyers who now accounted for 43% of new home loans.

“We expect that this demand will continue into 2022 as the significant shift in population continues and as investors return to the market,” Mr Reardon said.

“This boom in detached home building will not continue. The record year has been facilitated by HomeBuilder, low interest rates and a significant shift in population. We anticipate that all of these trends will move against home building in 2023 along with the impact of the loss of overseas migration.”