48 min

Debunking Australia's housing crisis myth, with Cameron Murray Fire at Will

    • Politics

Australiana is now Fire at Will - your safe space for dangerous conversations.

There's a common refrain when it comes to housing in Australia today: 'it's never been harder to enter the housing market'. Housing affordability has been labelled by politicians, the media, and aspiring homeowners as a historic crisis.

What if that's just not the case? What if we've seen the same story countless times before? What the markets are doing what they have always done, and what they should be doing? Perhaps, as Cameron Murray suggests, the market isn't the answer? Cameron is an economist and Australia's leading expert on housing. His new book is titled, 'The Great Housing Hijack: The Hoaxes and Myths Keeping Prices High for Renter and Buyers in Australia'.

Follow Australiana on social media here. [https://linktr.ee/AustralianaPod]

Subscribe to The Spectator Australia here. [https://www.spectator.com.au/join/]

Subscribe to Cameron's Substack here [https://www.fresheconomicthinking.com/].

Australiana is now Fire at Will - your safe space for dangerous conversations.

There's a common refrain when it comes to housing in Australia today: 'it's never been harder to enter the housing market'. Housing affordability has been labelled by politicians, the media, and aspiring homeowners as a historic crisis.

What if that's just not the case? What if we've seen the same story countless times before? What the markets are doing what they have always done, and what they should be doing? Perhaps, as Cameron Murray suggests, the market isn't the answer? Cameron is an economist and Australia's leading expert on housing. His new book is titled, 'The Great Housing Hijack: The Hoaxes and Myths Keeping Prices High for Renter and Buyers in Australia'.

Follow Australiana on social media here. [https://linktr.ee/AustralianaPod]

Subscribe to The Spectator Australia here. [https://www.spectator.com.au/join/]

Subscribe to Cameron's Substack here [https://www.fresheconomicthinking.com/].

48 min