Just 2 per cent of rentals in Australia are affordable for people on a low income

Advocates are urging all political parties to act urgently as a new report from Anglicare Australia shows the rental market is less affordable than ever.

Some 98 per cent of rental properties across the country are too expensive for workers on the minimum wage.

Some 98 per cent of rental properties across the country are too expensive for workers on the minimum wage. Source: Getty / mikulas1/Getty Images

Some 98 per cent of rental properties across the country are too expensive for workers on the minimum wage.

A new survey by Anglicare Australia of 45,992 rental listings shows the market is less affordable than ever, and all political parties need to act urgently.

Only 712 of the rental properties surveyed by Anglicare Australia, or two per cent, could be afforded by Australians earning minimum wage.

"Australia's housing crisis has reached fever pitch," Anglicare Australia executive director Kasy Chambers said.
"No part of the country has been spared. Rents are shooting up in towns and regions, and our cities have never been more expensive.

"We keep hearing that this election is about living costs, but housing is the biggest cost facing Australians."

Older Australians on the pension were even worse off, only able to afford 312, or one per cent, of the properties surveyed.

People living on the disability support pension could only afford 52 rental properties, or less than one per cent of the rental listings.
There were just eight affordable rentals for people living on Jobseeker, all rooms in share houses.

There are currently 950,000 on Jobseeker or other unemployment payments, more than before the pandemic.

Similarly, a person living on Youth Allowance student payments could afford a room from a small amount of share houses.

Low-income families were also found to be particularly vulnerable, with 78 properties found to be affordable to an out-of-work couple with two children, and 61 homes affordable for single parents receiving the parenting payment.
Anglicare is now calling on whoever wins the election in May to raise the rate of Jobseeker above the poverty line.

"If we don't, people out of work will be pushed deeper into housing stress and even homelessness," Ms Chambers said.

Australian Council of Social Service CEO Cassandra Goldie said people on low incomes are being caught in a "crushing pincer movement" of rising rents and stagnant incomes.

"They have long been priced out of major cities and, increasingly, from many regional areas," she said.

Dr Goldie said the findings were alarming and should be a wake-up call to the government and those running for election.

She said without major changes to housing policy, the situation will continue to deteriorate.

The South Australian Greens have called on the state government to introduce rent controls in response to Anglicare's findings.
In SA only two of 1125 properties listed were considered appropriate and affordable for a single person.

"Rental prices are skyrocketing out of control," SA Greens housing spokesman Robert Simms said.

"While many South Australians are being locked out of the rental market, some landlords are making record profits.

"It's time for the state government to follow the lead of other jurisdictions overseas and implement rent controls to protect struggling renters.

"This has worked in New York for years - why not Adelaide?"

Mr Simms said he would raise the issue when parliament resumed next week.

The Greens also renewed calls for the government to boost investment in public housing to reduce prices.

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3 min read
Published 28 April 2022 7:29am
Updated 28 April 2022 11:47am
Source: SBS, AAP



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