Don't blame the Chinese for soaring house prices: Buyer's agent Veronica Morgan

Don't blame the Chinese for soaring house prices: Buyer's agent Veronica Morgan
Jonathan ChancellorDecember 7, 2020

In the wake of yesterday's federal government announcement, industry figures are jumping in to give their thoughts on the proposed new laws.

Veronica Morgan of the Real Estate Buyers’ Association of Australia said her organisation supported better enforcement and widening of penalties for foreigners who failed to comply with local laws.

“It’s a hot market for loads of reasons but you can’t blame the Chinese,” Morgan told The New Daily.

There were concerns about foreign developers buying Australian land, building apartment blocks and then marketing those properties to overseas buyers with little oversight by local authorities, she acknowledged.

But she said it would be foolish to conclude the Chinese buyers were responsible for soaring pricess across the residential property market.

“It’s a hot market for loads of reasons but you can’t blame the Chinese,” Morgan said.

“It does appear that this debate appeals to some latent racism that exists in Australia.

“At the bottom of it all is fear and the reporting of it in the media needs to improve.”

The buyer's agent and managing director of Propertyology Simon Pressley said a tax of sorts on foreign property buyers had long been on the cards.

"There is absolutely no doubt that increased foreign buyer activity in Sydney and Melbourne have contributed to price growth", said Simon Pressley.

"Developers already fork out rebates in the order of $40,000 for third parties to spruik properties worth $500,000.

"Absorbing a $5,000 fee to a foreign buyer on an $800,000 apartment or a $10,000 fee on a property worth $1 million plus isn't a drop in the ocean to them."

"The principle of the fee proposal is sound and has likely come about with some influence from the RBA.

"But if legislators are seriously trying to cool Sydney's market they'd need to add another zero to the fee," Pressley said.

Ray White Real Estate chairman Brian White told Fairfax Media the proposed fees had the potential to "shock the market".

"And no market appreciates or responds well to shocks. It has connotations back to the aborted vendors tax proposed by the NSW Treasurer Michael Egan that needed to be abandoned due to market response," he recalled.

CBRE residential projects chairman Justin Brown told Fairfax Media the new taxes were counterproductive and ill-thought through.

"There is significant global evidence from recent times including Canada, Singapore and Hong Kong where these types of taxes on foreign investment have been totally counterproductive, caused significant corrections within the markets and harmed the construction industry," Brown said.

Jonathan Chancellor

Jonathan Chancellor is one of Australia's most respected property journalists, having been at the top of the game since the early 1980s. Jonathan co-founded the property industry website Property Observer and has written for national and international publications.
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