Tradies shortage gutting housing target, claim

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Excavator machinery at construction site, sunset in background.


Australia needs to loosen planning controls and boost apprenticeship incentives, reskill migrants already in the country, and launch an international campaign to bring in skilled migrants if we are going to meet immediate and future housing needs, claims Master Builders Australia..

That’s because, despite myriad Federal Government housing initiatives, Australia is on track to fall over 110,000 homes short of its National Housing Accord target, says the organisation.

Master Builders this week released its 2024 building and construction industry forecasts which, for the first time, cover the full five-year period of the Accord.

From 1 July 2024 until 30 June 2029, Master Builders forecasts 1,087,325 new home starts.

“We’re seeing inflation starting to near its target range and expect a fall in interest rates which will lead to a more favourable investment market,” said CEO Denita Wawn.

“The Federal Government has also announced a number of significant housing measures that focus on increasing supply in social and affordable housing and the rental market.

“However, constraints on the supply side like workforce shortages, industrial relations changes and a poor planning system counter the full effectiveness of these measures.

“Productivity in the industry has fallen 18 per cent over the last decade. It’s clear that governments need to expedite the rollout of planning reforms to reduce the high costs and time it takes to build.

“Concerningly, the full impact of the Closing Loopholes Bills and union pattern bargaining negotiations underway in several states has not been factored into these forecasts.

“Workforce shortages continue to be the biggest challenge for the industry across all sectors.

“At a Federal level, the government’s priority should be growing the building and construction workforce.

“We heard only recently from BuildSkills Australia that the industry needs 90,000 workers in the next 90 days.

“Domestically, we cannot fill this gap. We need to think outside of the box with better apprenticeship incentives, reskilling migrants already in Australia, and a targeted international campaign to bring in skilled migrants.

“Investment and support in the whole built environment is important. While the commercial and civil construction sectors have helped shield the economy from periods of negative economic growth, this is coming to an end.

“We can’t build the homes we need without the appropriate commercial and civil infrastructure to support it. This includes critical infrastructure such as utilities.

“Builders are up to the challenge to reach these targets but the barriers on the road need to be cleared to get the job done,” Ms Wawn said.

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    Jimmy-T
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      Australia needs to loosen planning controls and boost apprenticeship incentives, reskill migrants already in the country, and launch an international
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