The Australian’s Judith Sloan recently debunked KPMG chief economist Brendan Rynne’s spurious claim that a “short-sighted”, “kneejerk” cut to immigration would damage productivity and the economy.
So what are the latest figures telling us?
In the Financial Year 2022-23 we saw a record high net overseas migration of 518,000, while the federal government’s latest forecast is for a fall to around 375,000 which by the way would still be the second-highest annual read on record.
Such high volumes are driven in part by the student influx post pandemic.
Ahead, CBA expects a slowdown rate of population growth. “Using net overseas arrivals data for certain visa types till December 2023 suggest net overseas migration for 2023 was ~370k, roughly in line with government estimates for FY24″…
Now while the total number might be down, because the student element is the one moderating and most sensitive to rental demand, it might just help to cool rental growth a little – it is still way too high… many of those coming into the country still are cashed up and ready to buy property. So net, net given the limited supply of new property, due to falling building approvals, this will probably not help to ease undersupply.
http://www.martinnorth.com/
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