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Australia's housing crisis deepens as 100,000 homes fall short of targets

A bold 1.2 million-home promise now risks failure. Can faster permits and political unity fix Australia's growing housing emergency?

The image shows a paper with the text "Newtown Market Hall, the Poll, Mr. William's Proposition in...
The image shows a paper with the text "Newtown Market Hall, the Poll, Mr. William's Proposition in favour against Majority" written on it.

Australia's housing crisis deepens as 100,000 homes fall short of targets

The Opposition has slammed Labor's five per cent deposit scheme, arguing it is adding pressure to an already stretched housing market as Australia falls nearly 100,000 homes short of its building target.

The federal government is aiming to deliver 1.2 million homes over five years, but just 260,000 have been completed so far.

Deputy Opposition Leader Jane Hume said the government's signature first home buyer deposit scheme was adding demand into an already constrained system.

"They've let migration run out of control. That's, of course, putting pressure on houses.

"That five per cent deposit scheme... I think your viewers would be astounded to learn, is open to people that aren't Australian citizens. So that's putting even more pressure on our housing system."

Health Minister Mark Butler pushed back on the criticism, defending the scheme as a necessary tool to help first-home buyers break into the market sooner.

"Just think you would otherwise have to spend more than a decade saving up your deposit," Butler said.

"This is literally cutting a decade off the time that young people need to save for that deposit."

Butler rejected claims the policy is broadly open to non-citizens, saying while that is technically true, it applies only to permanent residents who have lived in Australia for an extended period.

"We've recognised, as the former government would have, are permanent residents in Australia who will be on a path to citizenship for the scheme. So, you know, that sort of red herring, frankly, doesn't do the Coalition any justice," Butler said.

Butler acknowledged the broader housing shortfall, saying the latest figures showed more work was needed across government and industry to lift supply and meet the target.

"This just reminds us again, we've got a lot of work to put our shoulders to the wheel," he said.

"Obviously, we're doing what we can. We've got to do more. The industry needs to do more. State governments need to do more to look at their planning laws."

The government has been working with states and territories to fast-track infrastructure and wind back regulations blamed for slowing construction, while the Opposition is calling for cuts to migration and a reduction in the National Construction Code to ease pressure.

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