Is big business, super funds the key to fixing social housing problem in Australia?

From The Herald Sun.

PHILANTHROPISTS, charities, superannuation funds and publicly-minded big business will be encouraged to build and manage social housing developments in a bid to dramatically boost the number of social houses available across Australia.

Treasurer Scott Morrison said major changes were needed in the way social housing was provided, to make it more attractive to the private sector.

The Lend Lease housing development in London is designed to provide affordable housing but also ensure profits for developers. Picture: Ella Pellegrini

Speaking at a $3.8 billion new housing estate in London which has set 25 per cent of its new houses aside for affordable housing, Mr Morrison said governments provided almost all of the social housing in Australia, but demand was outstripping supply.

“There are currently over 180,000 people on social housing waiting lists across Australia,’’ he said.

“The number of social housing dwellings would need to grow by almost 50 per cent in order to accommodate this number of people.

“At present the Commonwealth and state and territory governments combined are spending over $10 billion a year on housing but it is failing to improve outcomes, particularly for those with low-moderate incomes.’’

Mr Morrison will today launch a discussion paper on ways to increase the practise known as social impact investment, to get private sector involvement in the social housing market.

The aim is to make building, supplying and managing social housing an attractive business proposition, as well as being a good thing to do for the community.

At its core it is designed to deliver better outcomes for the people who use the service but it also needs to provide a financial return.

“If social impact investing doesn’t make money then people won’t do it,’’ Mr Morrison told News Corp.

“It’s not social impact benevolence. It’s social impact investment.’’

The Government could play a role by reducing the cost and burden of compliance, being a co-owner of a development, getting rid of legal barriers, helping organisations access low-cost, long-term finance, and potentially direct-paying Commonwealth rental assistance to landlords.

“A key objective is to create an enabling environment for social impact investment that doesn’t displace private sector financing,’’ Mr Morrison said.

Social impact investing can be done through issuing social impact bonds, which the New South Wales and South Australian governments are already doing on a project-by-project basis.

But large-scale private projects do not yet exist in Australia.

Mr Morrison this week toured the Elephant Gate project being developed by Lend Lease in Southwark, south London.

The project saw the notorious, crime-riddled Heygate council estate bulldozed, and a new development of 3000 homes go up in its place, incorporating community facilities such a skills centre, where trainees worked on the site.

A quarter of the properties were set aside for affordable housing — half of them available under shared ownership, where the owners buy just a portion of their home, according to their incomes.

The other homes are social housing, scattered throughout the entire complex, where tenants pay a capped rent, under the deal between Lend Lease and the Southwark Council.

“We don’t really have projects like this in Australia and it is does require a capacity in state governments, a capacity even in the Federal Government as well as building up our social organisations,’’ he said.

“You’ve got to get the returns, that’s the other challenging thing.

“You’ve got to get the security of income and that really does require you to rethink using your Commonwealth rental assistance and how you’re using welfare payments and getting a guarantee that rent is going to turn up in the bank account.

“When you start getting a more guaranteed income stream for these types of developments that’s far more attractive to the developers, far more attractive to the institutional investors.’’

Author: Martin North

Martin North is the Principal of Digital Finance Analytics

Leave a Reply