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NewsTo downsize, or not to downsize?
To downsize, or not to downsize?

To downsize, or not to downsize?

Are those of us aged over 50 really hogging all the detached houses in suburbs close to the amenities of the CBD, at the direct expense of younger families who can’t find homes to  buy?

There’s been a fierce blame game all week after the Australian Population Research Institute claimed "empty nesters" are forcing kids to grow up without backyards by refusing to downsize and move out.

As an issue it has everything; intergenerational warfare (with baby boomers somehow at fault), the inflated and unaffordable property market, and a big slab of presumed guilt for not moving on.

Sure, the census shows up to 60% of those desirable freestanding homes in Sydney’s and Melbourne’s inner and middle suburbs are occupied by those aged over 50. And why not?

 They have grown older there and are part of the community. It’s close to health facilities and as Australian Seniors’ Michael O’Neill rightly pointed out, these were often much more humble areas in the past.

In addition the recent changes to pension eligibility outlined in the last Budget mean that if you downsize and liberate the capital from the family home, you stand to lose some or all of the pension.

Should over-50s downsize from the family home so younger families can have more space, as media reports suggested this week?

Click here to vote

The data suggests almost all of those lucky enough to be living in such places will stay there until they are at least 75 - and even then, they will usually choose to buy another freestanding home.

The boffins behind the report say there’s a shortfall of tens of thousands of detached houses and it will get worse over time.

 So what’s to be done, and who ends up paying given that the planners or the market seem to have got it so wrong?

Inevitably there have been controversial suggestions that the family home should be included in the pension’s assets test to encourage downsizing.

Another bright idea, which arguably would hit also hit older Australians harder, would be to replace the stamp duty on sales with an annual property tax levied for just living in your home.

None of the pundits seem to mention how many grandparents in some of these homes and gardens provide childcare for 837,000 kids a week at some cost to themselves (see our October 1 blog on this issue).

Inevitably there’s no easy answer but the first response should not be to sheet home the blame and the cost for so-called reforms to those who have done nothing else but buy and love their homes.

As you’ll see from some member comments below, you seem to feel much the same. Also do answer our snap poll on the issue - ">Should over-50s downsize from the family home so younger families can have more space, as media reports suggested this week?"

Click here to vote

Originally posted on .

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bob
bob from NSW commented:

We're both 70+ , live in a 2 bed unit ,what would we downsize to , a tent , not all people retired have bags of money, and we don't feel guilty , that's just the luck of the draw . 

Thomas
Thomas from NSW commented:

No Way while my wife and I are alive we have earned the right to live where we want after all the years of slogging it out at work and all the family problems. We have a home we call the nest and provide a place where all our family can share when they have their own problems and for my wife and i to fell proud of until we are of an age that we cannot enjoy the fruits of our lives then we will move on but leave our home to the family who will decide how to handle their needs at that time. 

Kristina
Kristina from NSW commented:

We have worked hard to get the home we love. Sometimes 3 jobs at the same time and very long hours. We didn't start here but we now deserve to be here. The young ones of today expect everything to come easily and effortlessly. Let us enjoy the spoils of our hard work for as long as we can. 

Paul
Paul from NSW commented:

The suggestion that people should downsize their home in their fifties is a ludicrous and moronic suggestion, for too many reasons to list. Surely the FiftyUp club can find other subjects worthy of discussion! How about a discussion on the aged care industry, and the fact that people with more than $43,500 savings in the bank, pay higher fee's to the care provider, than that of someone who is concessional, with no savings at all? Or, how about a discussion on the cost of dental care in this country, with the view to introduce similar regulation that governs medical practitioners! As the cost of dental care in this country is ludicrous! 

Carol
Carol from NSW replied to Paul:

Paul, the sorriest thing we ever did to scrimp and save to get our home. I just wish we could have had a crystal ball to look into the future and see it is the people who have spent and enjoyed their money with no thought to the future seem to be the ones who now get everything free, and we are supposed to feel sorry for. I know their are people through no fault of their own have a hard time BUT their are the ones who think the Govt. and everyone else is responsible for them. 

J and B
J and B from NSW commented:

Good grief .. Maybe its time for the Australian Population Research Institute to go back to its own planet. Us earthlings believe every generation has the right to our lifestyle choices without fear or favour. 

anthony
anthony from VIC commented:

As grandparents and with children, family and freinds living interstate and overseas our house at times can be (up to the rafters) When we travel often family move in. The think tank so called intelligentsia and politicians would be better off seeking ways of preserving existing suburbs with freestanding houses rather than pulling them down and changing the character of suburbs by overcrowding with blocks of units and increasing traffic in what were formally quite suburban streets. Quite streets and courts in our suburb where there were ten /twenty houses and it was safe for kids to play in the street now have six times the number of units,some with only one car space?.We also have houses with four or five bedrooms with owners living overseas occupied by one or to students or simply left empty for eleven months of the year.Once again the governments of all persuasions are scared S/less of tackling the cause and effect of the housing problem as they love the taxes and have no genuine desire to slow down the overseas demand and reduce revenue. They could also slow down the immigration fort a peroid and allow infrastructure such as hospitals, transport, roads etc to catch up guess what? it ain,t gunna happen. Ah well as Ned said <SUCH IS LIFE> 

Espi
Espi from NSW commented:

I have downsized only because we moved interstate and we brought a smaller home, but we still have a large yard because i enjoy gardening so why should we be forced to downsize it should be because you want to not because we are been pressured. 

George
George from NSW commented:

Could not find any way to vote on the web site. The Click here to vote link does nothing. However I agree that it is a nonsense suggestion. 

Allan
Allan from NSW commented:

The reality is that most of these "choice" homes would be snapped up by cashed up Chinese buyers who seem to be the only ones who can afford them. 

Lynn
Lynn from QLD commented:

How dare ANYONE dictate to me that I am being selfish to the younger generation. We worked hard to support and provide for our own 'younger generation' and they likewise are working hard for theirs. If, in the process, we have been able to acquire a home that suits us, whether it be large or small, we have a right to determine to stay or downsize when it suits US. To the generation now in their 20s and 30s I say, start standing on your own two feet and stop expecting everything to be handed to you on a plate. I'd also suggest that it is not the Baby Boomers who are creating the problem of overpriced properties, try looking at the developers and their overpricing strategies. 

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