Australia's Housing Construction Crisis: Report Reveals 53% Productivity Drop, Urgent Reforms Needed

February 17, 2025
Australia's Housing Construction Crisis: Report Reveals 53% Productivity Drop, Urgent Reforms Needed
  • A recent report released on February 12, 2025, highlights a significant decline in productivity within Australia's housing construction sector, attributing this downturn to decades of poor performance and its implications for the ongoing housing affordability crisis.

  • The report reveals that housing construction productivity has plummeted, with physical productivity down 53% and labor productivity down 12% over the past 30 years, meaning fewer homes are being built per hour worked.

  • Since 1995, the sector has seen a 53% drop in productivity, indicating that for the same output, fewer than half as many homes are now being completed compared to three decades ago.

  • Compounding these issues, construction costs have surged by 40% in the last five years, while residential build times have increased by 80% over the past 15 years.

  • Complex regulations and lengthy approval processes are significant contributors to these delays, with some locales having planning regulations that span thousands of pages.

  • Key challenges affecting productivity include a slow approval process, lack of innovation, a fragmented industry dominated by small firms, and difficulties in attracting and retaining skilled workers.

  • To address these challenges, the report outlines seven reform directions aimed at enhancing productivity, focusing on streamlining approvals, fostering innovation, and tackling workforce issues.

  • Julie Abramson, a productivity commissioner, emphasizes that easing regulatory bottlenecks and promoting innovation in construction methods are critical to improving productivity.

  • Denita Wawn, CEO of Master Builders Australia, welcomed the report's recommendations and stressed the urgent need for a coordinated approach across all levels of government to tackle productivity challenges in the housing industry.

  • Mike Zorbas, CEO of the Property Council, supports the report's findings and calls for political unity to implement the recommended reforms to alleviate the housing deficit.

  • Policymakers are urged to find a better balance between the benefits of regulation, such as environmental protection and building safety, and the negative impact on construction productivity and housing affordability.

  • The report also highlights the negative effects of government policies on construction productivity, including slow regulatory processes and inconsistent policies across jurisdictions.

Summary based on 2 sources


Get a daily email with more Australia News stories

More Stories