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How to spark selling and kickstart supply: Angus Raine weighs in

By Juliet Helmke
15 October 2021 | 7 minute read
Angus Raine reb

Raine & Horne has added to the growing number of voices urging the Australian government to tackle barriers that are disincentivising older Australians from selling property.

Among the submissions to the federal government’s housing affordability inquiry, which are currently being reviewed, was Raine & Horne’s candid call to institute tax breaks for older investors and stamp duty assistance for downsizers. 

Penned by executive chairman Angus Raine, the network head opined that supply issues were being exacerbated by baby boomers and the Silent Generation facing deterrents to selling. He advised that by targeting measures in instances where older Australians do want to part with their properties, it would kick off a freeing-up of supply that would ripple down into entry-level markets.

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Mr Raine said retired Australians with property investments have been “indicating an aspiration to sell up some of their long-term properties to take advantage of recent value increases and to help fund their retirements”.

“However, they are being stalled by the prospect of paying large capital gains tax (CGT) liabilities that will ultimately slash their retirement nest eggs.”

With older investors balking at selling their investments, he described the situation as something of a “real estate stalemate” in capital city markets.

Mr Raine favours an option of providing older investors with a period of exemption – he suggests 24 months – on the payment of the CGT liability. In his view, it would cause a similar reaction as the 2007 transitional changes to superannuation, which allowed retirees to make up to $1 million in after-tax superannuation contributions before 1 July 2007.

When older Australians cashed in on their properties and redirected their retirement savings to superannuation, property markets in Sydney skyrocketed, he noted.

Moreover, while Mr Raine is cautious about suggested transitions from stamp duty to an annual land tax, he does recommend stamp duty tax breaks for “last home buyers”.

This scheme would implement a stamp duty tax break for buyers aged over 60 seeking a home to see them through retirement. Many in that bracket, he said, are interested in downsizing, but the finances don’t stack up when they consider the cost of paying duty on their next home. Thus, they’re staying longer in the large family dwellings they’ve owned for decades.

As with a CGT exemption, he sees stamp duty breaks for older buyers as another way of freeing up the market, creating more accessible rungs on the property ladder. 

Raine & Horne’s submission, which also included the suggestion of incentivising home buyers to move to regional areas, made similar points to those from the Real Estate Institute of Australia (REIA), who warned that expected “rightsizer” behaviour was not playing out. 

Welcoming initiatives like the recent extension of access to the downsizer contributions scheme, REIA opined that additional barriers for older Australians looking to downsize needed to be addressed.

REIA similarly advocated for changes to CGT on second residences and investment properties as well as addressing stamp duty barriers to encourage downsizing activity among retirement-aged property owners.

The Housing Industry Association (HIA) also noted the effect stamp duty was having on supply. “Older and smaller households may not downsize, while growing families are discouraged from upsizing,” the institute observed in its submission to the inquiry. HIA proposes more rigorous stamp duty reform, calling it “an inequitable tax and inefficient tax”.

Treasurer Josh Frydenberg has recently placed property tax on the federal agenda, telling Momentum Media that he sees housing taxes as a key issue for debate ahead of the next federal election. 

 

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR


Juliet Helmke

Based in Sydney, Juliet Helmke has a broad range of reporting and editorial experience across the areas of business, technology, entertainment and the arts. She was formerly Senior Editor at The New York Observer.

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