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Posted: 2023-01-04 18:42:10

In May 2020, not long after welcoming their first child, Fiona and her husband decided to embark on another exciting adventure: building a new home for their growing family.

Fast forward almost three years and Fiona has just given birth to their second child, but the family's house in regional South Australia is yet to be completed, with trade and material shortages sending timelines spiralling.

"It's things like getting timber, that was another 15 weeks or 16 weeks' [wait]," she says.

"We're really lucky because we've got a brickie already. Lots of people are building with the same [company], and there's lots of houses where they've just had to wrap the house and start on the inside.

"They've almost completed inside but they don't have bricks on the outside, because there's no brickies around or they're inundated."

For those trying to build, it's a predicament that hits close to home — literally. As domestic and international factors increase pressure on the nation's construction industry, swathes of Australians are facing delays.

With warnings the impacts could continue into the new year, the forecast for 2023 is a mixed bag.

Your quick guide

A woman looks down at a mobile phone.
A woman looks down at a mobile phone.(Pixabay/ABC News)
  • Why have there been delays? A combination of factors, including government stimulus for the building industry, and supply chain issues and workforce shortages borne from natural disasters, the COVID pandemic and war in Ukraine.

  • Will things improve in 2023? Availability of materials and labour is expected to improve, but experts say a backlog of approvals from the HomeBuilder grant means demand is likely to remain high.

  • Will building a home get cheaper? The cost of materials is not expected to return to pre-pandemic levels, although price increases are slowing.

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An illustration shows a hand emerging from a laptop holding a loudspeaker.(Pixabay/ABC News)

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First, let's go back a bit...

According to Flavio Macau, a lecturer and researcher in global logistics and supply chain management at Edith Cowan University, challenges plaguing the sector come down to a combination of factors including government stimulus for the building industry and supply chain issues borne from the COVID pandemic.

Dr Macau says cracks began to emerge with the announcement of the federal Homebuilder scheme in June 2020, which provided up to $25,000 towards building a new home or renovating an existing one.

"What happened was interest in the sales skyrocketed and then demand that was expected to be stable or go down suddenly raised sharply by about 40 per cent," he says.

"So what you have is this huge, huge, huge number of people that are looking for a new house, and then lots of builders selling houses like crazy. The problem is that there was no thinking about the consequences to the supply chain. 

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