Quote from Runningbear:
This has resulted in about 1 in 4 Australian adults becoming direct property investors, (basically everyone). This places a lot of pressure on the market. The government have no plans to change this.
Secondly, your primary residence in Australia if free of capital gains tax, so there is huge emphasis on buying dumps and adding value to the property you live in. They upgrading after 5 or so years. Any gains are free. I know a lot of people that make cash money in retail businesses and instead of declaring it to the tax man, spend it on extension and renovations. Then when they sell, it all looks like capital gains on which they pay no tax.
Thirdly, Australia's housing bubble is to a large degree, also a labour cost issue. The mining boom has dragged skilled tradesman away from the building industry, and driven up the real cost of trade wages in the building industry. A brick layer in Australia can earn about $150,000. As can an electrician or a plumber. This means the cost of building a house in Australia is one of the highest in the western world.
Now all the tradies working for mining companies have piles of spare cash, so you know what they do with it? The buy houses and apartments with it.
Finally, because building has become the backbone of the Australian economy, at the expense of other industries, the government has been forced to continue fueling the growth of the sector to maintain full employment. And the only way they could do this was through immigration.
The whole set up works while your increasing your population by 3% a year. But now all of a sudden, Australians have realised we're running out of things like water. And we actually can't continue down this path.
Make no mistake, if china bursts, everything in Australia will burst. Ask any corporate lawyer or banker what he is working on. It's all property or mining deals.
I walked into a bar in perth a year ago and I couldn't get served. I hold the manager she needed to get more staff. She turned around and said' I'll give you $45 an hour if you start now. I cant get any staff. Everyone is working in the mines.'
There is not a business or job in Australia that is not reliant of the mining/building boom. It is going to end ugly.