Conditions in the domestic housing market improving, but uneven: RBA's December 2020 meeting minutes
At the RBA's December 2020 meeting, the members noted that conditions in the domestic housing market were improving, but were uneven.
"Regional housing prices had increased by more than those in capital cities since the onset of the pandemic", RBA Governor Philip Lowe's meeting minutes read.
They highlighted the variation in changes in housing prices across the capitals, with Sydney and Melbourne markets more subdued than elsewhere in the country.
Lowe said that, within Sydney and Melbourne in particular, conditions in the detached housing market were firmer than for higher-density markets.
"Overall, national housing prices had increased only a little since the outbreak of the pandemic," Lowe stated.
They focused on the slowdown in population growth impacting the housing market nationally as a result of the closure of international borders.
"This had been more consequential in Australia than in many other economies," Lowe advised, saying that it has impacted the rental market in particular, with rents falling and rental vacancy rates in inner-city Sydney and Melbourne around their highest levels in many years."
Lowe touched on the strong growth in New Zealand housing markets, with population growth, expat buying interest and an earlier easing in lending standards.
"By comparison, these factors had been less relevant in Australia and, partly as a result, the increase in housing prices in Australia this year had been considerably smaller than in a number of other advanced economies."