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ยป Our capital cities will more than double in size

Date published: 17/03/2011

Our capital cities will more than double in size

I’ve just come back from a trip to the Middle East where I saw some overcrowded cities  –  Cairo with a population of close to 20 million people and Istanbul with a population of over 13 million people.

I sat in some shocking traffic jams while I was there and saw the results of poor city planning on the quality of life of the residents, so I was interested to read that the size of our capital cities will double over the next 50 years.

The National Institute of Labour Studies recently released a research study suggesting that Australia’s capital cities will more than double in size within 50 years under current immigration rates, and even with zero migration, the capitals will grow in size by roughly 50 per cent.

What does this mean for you and me as property investors?

I’ll explain in a moment but let’s first look at some more details of the report…

Lead researcher Jonathan Sobels, from Flinders University, was reported in The Australian as saying: “Sydney and Melbourne will rise to something of the order of seven million people. We’ve got something in the order of half of that now… Where are they all going to go? They’re not going to all go into 50-storey apartment blocks. Physically, the demand on land is going to be immense.”

The good news is that affluence is forecast to rise faster under higher immigration scenarios, driving up the use of space and resources. Per capita wealth would rise by about 2.3 times by mid-century with migration at the level of 260,000 a year. Without migration, per capita wealth would double over the same timeframe. But this growth will come at a price.

Consumption is forecast to rise with affluence, contributing to growing levels of waste, congestion and use of environmental resources.

“The magnitude of the impacts at all net overall migration levels suggests that unless substantial and timely actions are taken to address these impacts, some impacts have the potential to disrupt Australia’s economy and society,” the paper warns.

Sobels said farms and public land would be consumed as bulging cities expanded, and the release of this document, which was prepared for the Department of Immigration and Citizenship, has rehashed the old argument about immigration levels.

Creating a “sustainable Australia” became a Labor mantra at the last election after Julia Gillard veered sharply from Kevin Rudd’s ‘Big Australia’ plan. But even the Prime Minister’s vision for a sustainable Australia is under threat from immigration-linked urban sprawl, according to this paper.

To me the conclusion is inescapable  –  we’re going to have to substantially increase our population.

Look at the facts: today 43 per cent of our workforce is made up of baby boomers (people born between 1945 and 1964.) Over the next 15 years, Australia’s 5.3 million baby boomers are going to reach retirement age and as they leave the workforce they’ll stop paying tax, many will go on the pension and most use our public health care system.

You see, most baby boomers don’t have enough savings or superannuation to see them through retirement. This means many will have to keep working longer than they had anticipated but eventually, when they do retire, they place a massive burden on our financial system.

The Government will have to find the money for their pensions and health costs while at the same time making up for their lost taxation revenue by either:

    * Increasing taxes for those in the workforce, which would be political suicide, or;
    * Increasing the size of the tax paying workforce by importing younger workers.

Despite the rhetoric from both sides of parliament we have to significantly increase our population to replace the workforce, to capture skills and to grow the economy.

If you want to see the alternative, just have a look at what has happened to countries with an ageing population such as Japan, Germany and to some extent America.

So where are we going to put all these people?

If you break the numbers down, they suggest that over 150,000 new households will be formed each year. Most of these people will move to our capital cities, not regional Australia. Remember, all these people need to rent or buy a home. And most of these newcomers will want to live in our inner and middle ring suburbs  –  near schools, hospitals, work and infrastructure.

Clearly we’ll need more medium density dwellings.

There’s no doubt that this substantial increase in population will bring with it many social, political, infrastructure and environmental concerns, but the end result is inevitable.

In the words of a famous past prime minister  –  we must populate or perish.

As our population grows, there’ll be a massive impact on our property markets. One of the interesting statistics our research at Metropole has turned up is that that 30 per cent of the dwellings needed in Australia by 2030 have not been built yet.

The fact is that the value of properties around Australia will increase significantly, as will rents.

But as always some properties will outperform others  –  those close to the centre of our capital cities, or infrastructure and amenities, are likely to outperform.

For more information, or to discuss your specific situation, please contact me directly.

Michael Yardney
Metropole Property Strategists

Michael Yardney is the director of Metropole Property Strategists, a best-selling author and one of Australia’s  leading experts in wealth creation through property. You may subscribe to his e-magazine at www.propertyupdate.com.au. For more information about Michael visit www.metropole.com.au.

Now that you have read this, what do you think?  Do you have other ideas?  Please share you views with other members (eg by blog or discussion form) and/or request professional member(s) to contact you directly.

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