Foreign ownership of property by people who will never even see the building they own is not the same as a migrant coming here to live?
Are they trying to conflate being critical of rich cunts buying up properties and sitting on them with actual humans coming here to live?
Edit: After a quick search, this seems to be the new thing as of a month ago when articles mentioning migrants and housing started increasing. Wonder who’s pushing this…
Articles mentioning immigrants and "the housing crisis" have been all over Canadian media for well over a year. And by Canadian media I mean "U.S. owned media outlets operating within Canada." The narrative has stuck.
Yeah but they’ve been recent topics over there yeah? Like I know in the US it’s a big deal.
The media here hasn’t focused on migrants or whatever for about 20 years now. We’ve kinda already done and gotten over the migrant fear phase. So I don’t know who the intended audience is for this propaganda.
We write following the rise in disturbing rhetoric linking Australia’s migration levels to the current housing crisis
Oh please. I don't think you have anything to worry about with any of the major parties. They are full of hot air on this topic, while they might occasionally mention something negative about immigration the truth is they are all for letting in as many of the right type of immigrant at possible as per the wishes of the business council.
And if you think that supply / demand doesn't influence housing prices and wages then I have a selection of bridges you sell you.
The organisations – which include the Australian Council of Social Services, the Federation of Ethnic Communities Councils of Australia and National Shelter – say decades of poor policy choices by successive governments, including investor tax incentives and the chronic undersupply of social housing, have fuelled the crisis.
They point to fresh analysis from SQM Research that shows weekly asking rents rose by $84 nationally in the two-year period when Australia’s borders were closed between March 2020 and February 2022.
In a letter to Anthony Albanese and Peter Dutton, the groups said: “We write following the rise in disturbing rhetoric linking Australia’s migration levels to the current housing crisis.
We are deeply concerned that migrant communities are being scapegoated as the primary reason for this crisis.” The letter did not give examples or criticise any specific politicians.
CoreLogic’s head of residential research, Eliza Owen, said migration had affected the rental market but it was “definitely not fair to only target overseas migrants as something that is contributing to the housing crisis”.
She said a key driver was the change in average household size, which had decreased since the start of the pandemic from about 2.6 people to below 2.5, meaning more homes are need to house the population.
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