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Five things to know about migration and the housing market

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key takeaways

Key takeaways

Overseas migration is frequently being called out as one of the primary factors influencing the housing market, but there are many other factors driving values and the rental market.

For temporary migrants, 68.9% of migrants 15 years and older were renters in 2021, including 91.6% of temporary skilled visa holders and 83.5% of student visa holders.

Australia closed its borders to non-citizens and non-residents in late March 2020, and fully re-opened to vaccinated and non-vaccinated arrivals in July 2022. Net overseas migration is currently at record highs annually, and domestic household formation has increased substantially.

The COVID migration ban created volatility in rental markets, as demand increased due to the re-opening of international borders and supply was constrained by rising interest rates and labour shortages.

The SA4 regions with the highest volume of net overseas migration have seen the strongest increases in rent values, with an average 18% growth since July 2022.

Some markets with high exposure to overseas migration saw a sharp drop in rent values at the onset of the pandemic. However, longer-term growth in rent values is actually far less correlated with overseas migration.

Overseas migration is frequently being called out as one of the primary factors influencing the housing market.

In the face of high-interest rates, low consumer sentiment and stretched housing affordability, values and rents continue to rise and vacancy rates plummet as net overseas migration has hit record highs.

National home values have increased 7.2% in the year-to-date, and rent values rose 6.0% in the same period.

Heated discussions around migration are drawing more focus as housing affordability worsens.

But there are many other factors driving values and the rental market, and long-term, strategic migration policy should not be influenced by short-term volatility in migration and property markets.

1. Housing tenure of migrants skew to rentals in the short term

Fluctuations in overseas migration most immediately impact the rental market, rather than purchases.

ABS data on permanent migrant settlement outcomes showed that 60.8% of migrant arrivals in the five years to 2021 were renters.

The incidence of home ownership was higher among permanent migrants who had been in the country for longer.

As of 2021, this included 55.6% of arrivals between 2012 and 2016, and 70.6% of migrant arrivals before 2012 (figure 1).

Portion Of Permanent Migrants Renting Or Owning A Dwelling By Year Of Arrival

For temporary migrants, 68.9% of temporary migrants 15 years and older were renters in 2021.

This included 91.6% of temporary skilled visa holders and 83.5% of student visa holders.

2. Migration is high right now because it was temporarily restricted

Australia closed its borders to all non-citizens and non-residents in late March 2020, and fully re-opened to vaccinated and non-vaccinated arrivals in July 2022.

By March 2023, Australia’s annual population growth hit 2.17%, the highest rate since 2008.

Net overseas migration, which is overseas arrivals minus departures, is currently at record highs annually, with 454,000 added to the population in the past 12 months.

Net Overseas Migration Rolling Annual Australia

The pre-COVID decade average of annual net overseas migration is 217,000.

Assuming the average household size of 2.49 people per dwelling in January this year, the year to March would have seen demand for around 182,000 additional dwellings, in a year when around 175,000 dwellings were completed.

That’s not to mention new household formation domestically, as young Australians move out, buy first homes, or start their own families.

Domestic household formation has increased substantially in recent years amid a reduction in average household size.

The high level of net overseas migration in the past year is partly a temporary result of the travel ban.

It has been pushed higher by a concentrated number of overseas arrivals in a short space of time, and a 22% drop in departures compared to the historic five-year average.

Overseas Arrivals And Departures Rolling Annual Australia

The decline in departures is explained by the ABS as a lagging result of fewer arrivals in recent years, which has translated to fewer departures a few years later.

The record level of arrivals may in part be because of new, and postponed, decisions to come to Australia coalescing.

Without the ban, historic migration patterns suggest net overseas migration would probably be far closer to historic averages for the year to March 2023.

Notably, though, there have also still been fewer arrivals since COVID than we would have seen without travel restrictions.

The strong spike in migration this year will normalise in time, and should not be an influence on long-term migration policies.

3. The COVID migration ban created volatility in rental markets

A temporary cap on migration may relieve housing demand in the short run, but COVID-19 has already demonstrated the longer-term issues with temporary migration caps.

Because housing demand (the movement of people) is more liquid than housing supply (the construction or acquisition of new housing), the re-opening of international borders created a demand shock, which quickly pushed up rents and worsened an already tight rental market.

The demand shock also came amid constraints to newly available supply, as sellers were put off by rising interest rates, and new home completions were delayed by increased material costs and labour shortages.

Historically, the SA4 regions with the highest volume of net overseas migration have been Melbourne’s South East and Inner SA4’s as well as Sydney’s Inner South West and Paramatta.

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