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Posted: 2024-05-19 02:28:48

Last week's federal budget included a special chapter on Australia's housing crisis.

It was 42 pages long, and contained over 20 graphs, with Treasury officials taking time to explain the problems in our housing system.

One graph showed Australia's rental vacancy rate hit a record low recently. But what is the vacancy rate actually signifying?

If you think it's telling you about the total stock of rental properties in Australia's housing markets, that's not quite right.

'Vacancy' and 'unoccupied' are not the same thing

To visualise what we're talking about, this is the graph Treasury officials used in the budget to show the decline in rental vacancy rate.

They say the number of dwellings available for rent has been falling in Australia since early 2020.

National dwelling vacancy rate 2024-25 budget

They say the rental vacancy rate has fallen below 1.5 per cent, and 3 per cent is considered the rate that reflects a "balanced" rental market (where landlords and tenants have similar bargaining power).

In his recent book, The Great Housing Hijack: The hoaxes and myths keeping prices high for renters and buyers in Australia, the economist Cameron Murray spends more time explaining how to think about that graphic, and it's really interesting.

He says two vacancy concepts often get conflated in our discussions about housing: vacant and unoccupied.

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