logo
Melbourne nurse Sarah is trying to save for a home near work – neither party's housing plan will get her any closer

Melbourne nurse Sarah is trying to save for a home near work – neither party's housing plan will get her any closer

The Guardian18-04-2025
When Sarah* opens her banking app, she sees an account labelled Home Saver. After years of trying to save, there's still $0 in it. The 30-year-old works as a nurse at a major hospital in Melbourne. She normally makes between $2,100 and $2,300 a fortnight. Her last pay, because she got sick, was $1,900.
'I don't think there are any nurses in my demographic – young, single people – who are like, 'Yep, buying a house is a realistic dream,'' she says. 'I don't know many people who are buying. In fact, it's just a lot of people [in] rental stress.'
Sarah is exactly the type of voter the major parties are trying to court with competing housing policies – a millennial who would love to secure the status of first home buyer.
Advocates wonder why the new commitments have targeted a small number of first home buyers over the larger number of lower-income people living in rental stress. And industry experts warn the situation has become so dire, they are only seeing Dinks (dual income, no kids) or people with inheritance make it on to the property ladder.
After paying for rent, groceries, petrol and bills, Sarah says she has hardly anything to put aside. Last year, she stopped living by herself and moved back into a share house to keep her rent down.
Labor has promised to lift the caps on the current federal scheme, allowing every first home buyer to secure a mortgage with a 5% deposit without paying lenders' mortgage insurance (LMI), and to build 100,000 homes across the country reserved for first home buyers.
The Coalition has said it will allow first home buyers who purchase new builds to deduct the interest from their repayments from their income tax, capped at the first $650,000 of the mortgage. They've also promised to unlock $50,000 of super to help with a deposit.
Sarah says neither plan would really help her.
She now rents 10 minutes away from the hospital, but this is a necessity, not a luxury – like many nurses, her shifts often finish at 10pm and start again at 7am.
'I've looked at the median house price around my area, for a two-bedroom apartment, and it's $500,000. So 5% of that is $25,000,' she says. 'It would take many, many years.'
Taking out super could help get her into the market earlier, but she worries it could impact on her livelihood in retirement – or even earlier, if she got sick and needed to access it sooner.
'It is a Band-Aid solution,' she says.
Natasha Janssens, a financial educator, says both policies would 'boost demand' but neither addresses the key problem – 'how overextended families are becoming in order to buy a home'.
'The Coalition policy is offering a cash benefit once you buy a home, the Labor policy is reducing the cost of entry,' Janssens says.
Sign up for the Afternoon Update: Election 2025 email newsletter
She says the tax deduction won't help people struggling to see out the end of the year, while the 5% deposit passes on more risk to the homebuyer if the market dives.
'In both cases, politicians are asking young Australians to put themselves at risk … Whether that is by risking their income in retirement or by overextending themselves and purchasing with a small deposit.'
In the early 2000s, the average house price was four times the average income. Now, it's more than eight. As prices have skyrocketed, saving has become even harder: it now takes more than 12 years for an average household to save a 20% deposit, up from six in the early 1990s.
Janssens says this means people often have to be coupled to get into the housing market.
Zena and her partner count themselves very lucky. They are Dinks – with a double income of about $250,000 and no kids. They know they are in a position many aren't.
They want to buy an already-built home in Melbourne's inner north, so think Labor's policy will get them in the door faster.
Because of their income, they are locked out of the existing scheme.
'If they [Labor] win the election, we would benefit from that,' she says.
'Because I think we'll be in a position to have more than a 10% deposit, but we probably won't be able to get to 20%, so that means that we would be able to save on the LMI cost.
'If we're looking at a house which costs $950,000, the LMI on, if we had a 10% deposit, would [depending on the lender] be like $16,000 or $17,000 added to the loan.'
Sign up to Afternoon Update: Election 2025
Our Australian afternoon update breaks down the key election campaign stories of the day, telling you what's happening and why it matters
after newsletter promotion
She believes both parties should support the building of nicer apartments in cities, and focus on policies that help first home buyers, 'compared to them being outbid by boomers who are investing'.
Melissa Gielnik, the managing director of Smart Lending Mortgage Brokers, says the biggest winners would be those who take advantage of the Coalition's plan and buy a new-build. 'It's almost like being an investor,' she says. 'It's tax-deductible interest.'
Gielnik says it will be a 'massive combo' with the federal government's current first home guarantee scheme, which wipes LMI and stamp duty to those with a 5% deposit under certain incomes.
She thinks 'it's very positive for first-time buyers', whoever gets in.
Still, some of those buyers aren't convinced.
Louise Smith, 34, has been saving for a home almost 20 years, since she started working at 15.
She wants to buy in the next year. Labor's policy won't help her further, because she already has the deposit to purchase in the area she wants. But the Coalition's policy also doesn't appeal, because she has a low income, and it won't help with the high mortgage repayments.
The main thing Smith wants to see is lower house prices. Last week she inspected a two-bedroom home in Reservoir, in Melbourne's north, that needed substantial renovations, had no garden and bouncy floorboards. It had a price tag of almost $1m.
'What would actually help would be regulation to the housing market so that these absolutely exorbitant prices weren't the norm,' she said. 'It's outrageous.'
The CEO of Homelessness Australia, Kate Colvin, wants everyone to look at the numbers. Over the year to 2024, there were 117,000 first home buyers, and more than half a million renters on commonwealth rent assistance who were paying more than 30% of their income in rent.
'We should really be talking about renters and homelessness,' she says. 'We've got 280,000 people coming to homeless services every year, which is more than twice as many first home buyers.'
Colvin says 'the lion's share' of the housing crisis could be dealt with by building more social housing.
'If we got to the point where we had one in 10 properties that were social or affordable housing, then people like [Sarah] could be paying more affordable rent and saving for home ownership.
'It's the policy solution to rule them all.'
While Labor has made inroads, with February figures showing 340 new social homes have been built and about 5,400 are under construction, 'it needs to scale up', Colvin says.
'We're in the middle of a federal election, we've got to be aspiring to be a country that's better than Australian families raising their children in tents.'
* Name has been changed for privacy
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Japan panel proposes 6% minimum wage hike to counter inflation woes
Japan panel proposes 6% minimum wage hike to counter inflation woes

Reuters

timean hour ago

  • Reuters

Japan panel proposes 6% minimum wage hike to counter inflation woes

TOKYO, Aug 4 (Reuters) - A Japanese Labour Ministry panel on Monday proposed a 6% increase in the national average minimum wage for this fiscal year, the biggest such jump since at least 2002, as the government scrambles to sustain wage-driven economic growth. Achieving real wage growth has become a top policy priority for Japan, as persistent inflation continues to squeeze households. Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba's ruling coalition has lost its majority in both houses of parliament in recent elections, highlighting growing frustration with the government's response. The proposed hike would raise the average minimum wage to 1,118 yen ($7.57) per hour, a labour ministry official said, surpassing last year's 5% increase and marking the largest rise since the current system was introduced 23 years ago. Ishiba pledged last year to make "untiring efforts" to raise the average minimum wage by 42% to 1,500 yen per hour by the end of the decade, bringing forward the target from the original mid-2030s goal set by the previous administration. Higher minimum wages carry significant implications for Japan's wage trajectory, especially given that the proportion of workers affected by minimum wage revisions is relatively high compared to other developed economies. However, steep wage hikes pose risks for small businesses, which employ about 70% of Japan's workforce, as these firms already allocate a larger share of profits to wages than their larger counterparts and may struggle to absorb further increases. Japanese companies agreed to raise wages by an average 5.25% this year, their biggest pay hike in 34 years and the third straight year of robust growth as they grapple with severe labour shortages and seek to shield workers from inflation. The wage outlook is among key factors the Bank of Japan will scrutinise in deciding whether to raise the interest rate again. Unlike other major economies, Japan's inflation-adjusted real interest rates remain deeply negative due to the slow pace at which the BOJ rolled back a decade-long, massive stimulus. ($1 = 147.7600 yen)

Boeing addresses more labor strife amid attempt to resuscitate its reputation
Boeing addresses more labor strife amid attempt to resuscitate its reputation

The Independent

time3 hours ago

  • The Independent

Boeing addresses more labor strife amid attempt to resuscitate its reputation

A strike by thousands of workers that build fighter jets for Boeing at three U.S. plants is the second labor disruption for the plane builder in less than a year. The strike that began just after midnight Monday involving more than 3,000 members of the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers arrives as Boeing is attempts resuscitate its reputation. Boeing, once a beacon of U.S. manufacturing and the gold standard in the global aircraft industry, has been rocked by fatal crashes, investigations and changes in leadership. Following is a quick rundown of events that have buffeted the Arlington, Va., company. ___ January 2013: 787s worldwide are grounded nearly three weeks after lithium ion batteries that are part of the planes led to a fire in one plane and smoke in a second. August 2015: The first 737 Max plane rolls off the production line and within a year are undergoing flight tests. Oct. 29, 2018: Lion Air Flight 610, a Boeing 737 Max 8, plunges into the Java Sea off the coast of Indonesia minutes after takeoff from Jakarta, killing all 189 people on board. Questions are raised over a new Boeing flight-control system called MCAS that Boeing did not disclose to pilots and airlines. Indonesian investigators say the Flight 610 pilots struggled for control as the automated system pushed the nose of the plane down more than two dozen times. March 1, 2019: Wall Street remains enamored with Boeing as commercial aircraft orders rocket. Shares of Boeing Co. close at an all-time high of $430.35. March 10, 2019: Ethiopian Airlines Flight 302, a Boeing 737 Max 8, crashes after takeoff from Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, killing 157 passengers and crew members. Shares of Boeing begin a long, downward slide and have yet to recover. March 2019: Within days of the second crash, the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration and regulators in nations around the world order the grounding of all 737 Max jets. Dec. 23, 2019: Boeing ousts CEO Dennis Muilenburg, who was seen as pressuring the FAA to lift the Max grounding order. Jan. 7, 2021: U.S. Justice Department charges Boeing with fraud but won't prosecute the company for misleading regulators about the 737 Max if it pays a $2.5 billion settlement. Jan. 5, 2024: A panel covering an unused emergency exit blows off a 737 Max 9 during an Alaska Airlines flight. Pilots land the plane safely. Feb. 26, 2024: A panel of outside experts, convened after the two deadly crashes, reports Boeing's safety culture falls short despite the company's efforts to fix it. March 11, 2024: A LATAM Airlines Boeing 787-9 Dreamliner flight between Australia and New Zealand suddenly plunges, injuring 50 people. Boeing tells airlines to inspect switches on pilots' seats after a published report said an accidental cockpit seat movement likely cause the rapid loss of altitude. March 25, 2024: Dave Calhoun, who replaced Muilenburg, says he will step down as CEO by year-end as part of a broader shakeup of Boeing leadership. July 7, 2024: Boeing agrees to plead guilty to conspiracy to defraud the U.S. government for misleading regulators who approved pilot-training standards for the Max. July 31, 2024: Boeing names Kelly Ortberg as its new chief executive. Ortberg is a trained engineer and was CEO of aerospace supplier Rockwell Collins for eight years. Many see his appointment as an attempt by Boeing to get back to its roots. Sept 13, 2024: About 33,000 Boeing factory workers walk off the job in a strike that will cripple production at one of the preeminent manufacturers in the U.S. for almost two months. It is the first labor action taken against the company in 16 years. May 23, 2025: The Justice Department reaches a deal with Boeing that takes criminal prosecution off the table for allegedly misleading regulators about the 737 Max jetliner before the two fatal planes crashes. Boeing agreed to pay or invest more than $1.1 billion, including an additional $445 million for crash victims' families, removing the risk of a criminal conviction that would have jeopardized the company's status as a federal contractor.

Boeing St. Louis defense workers set to strike from Monday after rejecting latest offer
Boeing St. Louis defense workers set to strike from Monday after rejecting latest offer

Reuters

time19 hours ago

  • Reuters

Boeing St. Louis defense workers set to strike from Monday after rejecting latest offer

Aug 3 (Reuters) - Union members who assemble Boeing's (BA.N), opens new tab fighter jets in the St. Louis area rejected the U.S. planemaker's latest contract offer on Sunday and will strike at midnight on Monday, the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers union (IAM) said. "IAM District 837 members ... deserve a contract that reflects their skill, dedication, and the critical role they play in our nation's defense," the union's Business Representative Tom Boelling said. Boeing said it was ready for the action. "We are prepared for a strike and have fully implemented our contingency plan," Boeing Air Dominance vice president and general manager Dan Gillian said in an emailed statement to Reuters. "We're disappointed our employees in St. Louis rejected an offer that featured 40% average wage growth," he added. Boeing's original proposal included a 20% general wage increase over four years and a $5,000 ratification bonus, as well as more vacation time and sick leave. The union had rejected the offer, saying it was insufficient. Last week, Boeing sent a new contract offer to the union with some minor compensation changes that would benefit senior union members, according to the company. The offer also kept current overtime policies, which Boeing had proposed modifying in the last contract offer. The workers assemble Boeing's fighter jets and the MQ-25, an aerial refueling drone being developed for the U.S. Navy. Boeing's defense division is expanding manufacturing facilities in the St. Louis area for the new U.S. Air Force fighter, the F-47A, after it won the contract this year. The upcoming strike by the union, representing 3,200 employees, would be much smaller than the one Boeing was hit with last fall, when 33,000 machinists at Boeing's commercial plane division walked out for nearly two months. That strike ended with approval of a four-year contract that included a 38% wage increase.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store