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Posted: 2023-03-24 03:35:26

Remember the pandemic? It abruptly changed how many of us lived.

Some were initially forced back in with parents after losing their job and then flew the coop again when fears that our economy would tank subsided.

As the working-from-home revolution became more than a passing necessity, others took a leap of faith and moved away from big cities. This fuelled a housing boom that shocked locals in regional locations, especially near the beach.

Some who stayed behind in big cities sought out larger homes in the suburbs, maybe with a spare study. And – perhaps after being cooped up with flatmates in rolling lockdowns – more of us decided to live alone or with partners.

But don't believe anecdotes.

Our central bank just published a paper that shows that trends in household composition — how many of us are living in a property on average and who we are living with — sped up since the start of the pandemic in early 2020.

A graph published by the RBA in March 2023 that shows household size dropping and the amount of people living alone rising.
A graph published by the RBA in March 2023.

The Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) has been arguing for a while that the change in how we decided to live during the pandemic was one reason why rents didn't drop sharply in most areas, despite the surge of emigration early in the pandemic and population stagnation while borders were closed.

"The decline in average household size since the start of 2020 – around 1 per cent – is estimated to have contributed to around 120,000 additional households being formed," RBA analysts noted in that paper.

"And, as a result, additional demand in the rental market.

"Average household size has remained low in the face of the recent tightness in the rental market and rising rents. Solid growth in incomes (and, for some, increased working from home) has underpinned demand for space."

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