
Briefs
Census 2016: fewer households being formed
Between 2006 and 2011, the rate of growth in Australia’s population (8.3%) was slightly lower than the rate that new households formed (8.6%). This indicates that although the population was increasing the new households kept forming at a faster rate, meaning that there were sufficient dwellings available and affordable for them to move in to and ‘form’ households in.
What is value capture?
With the Australian Government issuing a discussion paper in late 2016 into ‘Using value capture to help deliver major land transport infrastructure’, it is important to understand what value capture is and how it might be levied.
City Deals: Coordinating the growth of Australian cities
The Australian Government’s City Deals are a way for governments, industry and local communities to ‘develop collective plans for growth and commit to the actions, investments, reforms and governance needed to implement them.’ By bringing together all levels of government, the private sector and the community, City Deals aim to provide a coordinated investment plan for capital cities and urban regions.
What is a UK City Deal?
The Australian Government is developing a City Deals program that is modeled on the UK Government’s City Deal policy. As part of the first wave of its City Deals which it approved in 2012, the UK Government committed £2.3 billion to around 40 programs in eight cities spread over 30 years. But just what is a UK City Deal?
Percentage of Australian households in social housing, 2006 to 2016
Although the total number of households in social housing (i.e. public, community and SOMIH housing) has increased over the last 10 years (from 375,038 in 2006 to 394,289 in 2016) the proportion of Australian households living in social housing has been falling.