Skip to content
Building Construction, Government Federal

Inflation moves towards target but builders caution against complacency

Master Builders Australia 2 mins read

30 October 2024

 

While annual inflation is back within the Reserve Bank of Australia’s target band for the first time since 2021, Master Builders Australia has warned temporary energy relief and rent assistance measures are masking systemic housing inflationary issues.

 

The housing crisis continues to put a strain on Australians with new data from the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) confirming that housing related inflation is once again higher than it should be.

 

Master Builders Chief Economist Shane Garrett said the annual inflation rate dropped to 2.8 per cent during the September quarter.

 

Measures of underlying inflation offer a truer view of the inflationary picture. On this score, inflation still looks too high: trimmed mean inflation clocked in at +3.5 per cent.

 

Over the past year, rents are up by 6.7 per cent while the cost of new dwelling purchase is 4.8 per cent higher.

 

Australia’s rate of inflation would be markedly lower if housing cost pressures weren’t so strong,” Mr Garrett concluded.

 

Master Builders Australia CEO Denita Wawn said housing costs continue to put upward pressure on the inflation rate and is prolonging the pain being felt by families.

 

“Increasing the supply of new homes, including rental accommodation, is crucial.

 

“A number of barriers continue to hamstring the industry’s ability to speed up the delivery of new homes including high building costs, labour shortages, CFMEU disruption and pattern EBAs, and planning delays.

 

“We can’t keep dragging our feet with the housing crisis. Meaningful action to address supply-side barriers in the housing market is not happening fast enough.

 

“Most of the solutions to the housing crisis are in ministerial portfolios outside of the housing portfolio so Ministers need to be working together to get the job done.

 

“For example, the industry is still awaiting the outcome of the reviews into the apprenticeship incentives system and the skilled migration core skills occupation list. These are both crucial if we’re going to tackle labour shortages,” Ms Wawn concluded.

 

Media contact: Dee Zegarac, National Director, Media & Public Affairs

0400 493 071 | [email protected]

Media

More from this category

  • Government Federal, Research Development
  • 24/03/2026
  • 12:02
Monash University

Monash University welcomes historic Europe-Australia agreement on trade, national security, research and innovation

Monash University Deputy Vice-Chancellor (Research & Enterprise) and Senior Vice President, Professor Robyn Ward AM, has welcomed today's historic announcements by Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, and President of the European Commission, Ursula von der Leyen:the conclusion of the Australia EUFTA, the Security and Defence Partnership and fast tracking of Australia’s association with Horizon Europe. "Today's historic announcement about the Australia EU Free Trade Agreement, the establishment of an Australia EU Security and Defence Partnership, and progress toward Australia’s association with Horizon Europe represent a major strengthening of Australia’s partnership with Europe," Professor Ward said. "For Monash University, these outcomes will…

  • Building Construction, Education Training
  • 24/03/2026
  • 09:27
Melbourne Polytechnic

New national training to accelerate modern construction skills as first online MMC course launches

Melbourne Polytechnic confirms 2026 rollout of Future of Housing Construction Centre of Excellence programs MELBOURNE, 24 March 2026: As pressure grows to build more…

  • Contains:
  • Gambling, Government Federal
  • 24/03/2026
  • 06:46
Alliance For Gambling Reform

1000 days of inaction on gambling reform must stop – 40 groups call on PM to take urgent action

A coalition of unions, community, public health, church, academic and advocate groups have signed an open letter to the Prime Minister calling for urgent action on gambling reforms – 1000 days since the government received a parliamentary inquiry report into online and is still yet to formerly respond. The letter – signed by Unions NSW and the Victorian Trades Hall Council, ACOSS, the Salvation Army (Richmond), Mission Australia, GetUp, the Public Health Association of Australia, Australian Preventative Health Association, the Menzies Schol of Health Research and the NSW Council of Churches – acknowledges the government’s work on its social media…

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.