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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

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Someone
Someone from VIC commented:

Gen Y needs to start out in the cheaper outer burbs and work their way inwards, just like we did. 

Ruth
Ruth from NSW commented:

We worked long and hard to get the house and garden we have now. Maybe some of these people could sit on a lounge made of an old mattress and not have a Tv for the first five years of marriage and drive around in my 1975 VW beetle for the first 20 years of marriage, then they may get the house and land they want me and other hard workers to give up because we are "empty nesters". They can get stuffed! 

Gillian
Gillian from QLD commented:

Why are the 'babyboomers' always the political and media targets? So many of us have worked long and hard, well beyond retirement age. We have paid our taxes and supported welfare; we did not receive any generous government handouts, apart from the pathetic monthly 'child endowment'; most of us did not get caught up in hire purchase but saved for the cost of the item before purchasing; and we paid the highest home interest rate on record, anywhere between 13 1/2 % and 19%. Many of us are self funded retirees whose fortnightly allocation is not that much more than the pension, certainly not 5x as we have to pay for medication and GP appointments. Now you say they want our house assets! I say, "Bugger off!" 

bill
bill from QLD commented:

my wife and I bought this property to live in ,raise children and grand children and to die in so if you think that I will tolerate some jumped up johnny come lately causing me to loose my property just to make his argument for down sizing relevant Then he can stick his opinion and plans where the sun don't shine 

Nixon
Nixon from QLD commented:

Governments and Business should move their operations to the suburbs where rates would be cheaper and the workers can buy reasonably priced homes. 

Bob
Bob from NSW commented:

It is not we the oldies to blame, our block 50 X120 feet was the smallest allowable back in the 1960's. It is the developers who have been able to squeeze the powers that regulate into allowing smaller blocks, smaller clearances between house and boundaries so they can fit more houses into a subdivision. Our children grew up in our house and I'll be buggered if I will sell. signed Cranky old Bob 76yo. 

Vicki
Vicki from NSW commented:

This generation amaze me and these topics you choose to promote amaze me as well. Why discuss this subject it's not going to happen its "poppy cock" as my grandmother would say when she choose not to talk about something that had no relevance such as this subject. The media just zoom in on a thought bubble and off they go doesn't even matter what why or how they ramp it up and run with it. What hard working honest retired Australian citizen is going to rollover and put their hands up and say here have my house you and your kids need it more than I do! It's a no brainer and what Government would have the balls to make this law. 

Ian
Ian from NSW commented:

Preposterous humbug. The targeted home and properties (all with a picket fence and nicely tended gardens, lawns and flowers as no doubt visualised from old 1950's copies of the Womens Weekly by the dull witted bureaucrats who dreamt up this latest scare tactic) mainly are located handily to capital cities CBD's. At current prices for many such visualised properties $800,000 would only be a starting bid, with many well changing hands for more that $1million. And who is able to afford such outlays. Surely not the parents of young children who the media continues to lament will never be able to afford the Australian dream. Well, not in the above scenario, unless (shock, horror) they sensibly look to outer areas (the West where Parramatta is trumpeted to be the new centre of NSW's universe. Can't be all that bad having regard to the resources and infrastructure pouring in from Government. The proposals tend to make one think that this is all a thinly veiled fascist plot to rid society of senior citizens enjoying the latter stages of their life inn their own homes (where one ideology wants them to stay to avoid adding to strained government costs for institutionalised aged care. And what comment can be made about targeted annual land taxes for seniors - utter discriminatory fantasy for any democratically elected government. Show the ire grey brothers and sisters! 

Joanne
Joanne from QLD commented:

Toughen up. This generation has received so many handouts, they seem to struggle if things aren't as they expect it should be. 

Someone
Someone from TAS commented:

I think we should downsize for environmental reasons 

Carol
Carol from NSW commented:

then go ahead and do it. 

Allan
Allan from QLD commented:

Explain what downsizing would do to help the environment. If a large block of land is sold, then approval is given to build multi storey blocks of units/ apartments on them. This adds to the burden already placed on inadequate infrastructure. And don't forget the profits made by developers. Plus, councils enjoy the extra, highly inflated, rates being received. Helps when councillors discuss their next salary increase and possibly a new park bench. 

Theo
Theo from NSW commented:

See my comment 8 Nov 2015 

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