Chill Financial Historian
How did Australia — once the world's "working man's paradise" — quietly become home to the second most unaffordable housing market on Earth? Sources: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1Emn0ltd260-t8pWrbtYgXuBlhSgL6GEAA03LWRkGKNw/edit?usp=sharingIn this deep dive, we trace the structural collapse of the Australian Dream across eight decades, from the postwar quarter-acre suburb to the 2026 reality of $1.75 million Sydney medians, record household debt, and a generation that may never own a home.We break down the mechanics no one wants to talk about: how house prices decoupled from wages, how negative gearing and the 50% CGT discount engineered a speculation machine, how zoning and NIMBYism strangled supply, how migration policy ran years ahead of construction capacity, how Australian households became among the most indebted on the planet, and how Dutch disease and a productivity slump hollowed out the productive economy beneath it all.Using the latest 2026 data from Cotality, the ABS, the RBA, the OECD, the National Housing Supply and Affordability Council, PropTrack, and Demographia, this isn't a doom-and-gloom rant — it's a structural breakdown of how a national promise quietly stopped being delivered, and what the May 2026 federal budget reforms actually change.If you care about housing affordability, generational wealth, the cost-of-living crisis, or just want to understand how a wealthy country slowly fails its own citizens without ever technically "collapsing," this one's for you.📊 Topics covered:The postwar Australian Dream and the quarter-acre gospelWhy house prices and wages stopped moving together after 2000Negative gearing, CGT, and the 2026 federal budget overhaulAustralia's housing supply crisis and the failed Housing AccordThe migration vs. construction mismatchRecord household debt and the variable-rate trapDutch disease, deindustrialisation, and the productivity slumpThe "Exit Generation" and the psychological cost of a broken dream
20 episodios
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