The Press

Rents, rates, power: costs households can’t control

- Rob Stock

Rents, rates and insurance are the costs households can’t control and are keeping mortgage rates high.

And some cities are getting it worse than others on some of those fronts, with Wellington residents paying the most for house and contents cover and Aucklander­s, with their flasher cars and higher crime rates, paying the most for car cover.

The Reserve Bank said a fall in inflation in the price of imports to the country had been welcome, and rising unemployme­nt and slowing wage growth had also helped bring down inflation. But price rises remained in parts of the economy where households had little control – council rates, rents, insurance premiums and power.

As a result, the Reserve Bank did not expect to see inflation drop below 3% later this year, which is disappoint­ing for people with large home loans needing to refix part of their mortgages in the next few months hoping the central bank will soon begin to reduce the official cash rate.

“Insurance costs have jumped up massively in the past year to the point where Kiwis are feeling it and acting on it,” said Justin Lim, co-founder of the Quashed insurance comparison service.

Quashed provides quotes from insurers. The number of people seeking quotes has tripled in a year and, based on the quotes generated, insurers have been asking for around 30% more in total from households insuring a home, its contents and two cars.

Canterbury had the biggest percentage increases in house and car insurance, quotes generated by Quashed users indicated, while Wellington had the highest increase in contents cover premiums.

The average house insurance quote for Wellington homeowners was just over $4000 in the first quarter this year, compared to just over $2000 in Auckland, and just under $2900 in Canterbury. Some regional variations are not explained by increases imposed by insurers. Wellington households increased the sum they insured their contents for by 11% in a year, taking the average contents cover sought to just over $87,400 compared to an average of $61,342 in Canterbury and $62,317 in Auckland.

Two years ago someone paying $600 for their contents cover could now be paying more than $1300, and someone paying $1900 for their house cover could be now paying around $2800.

“Council rates have increased steeply over the past year and are likely to rise significan­tly this year,” the Reserve Bank said.

Councils were playing catch-up after having spent too long spending too little on infrastruc­ture. High inflation has swelled the cost for councils to do anything. In time, rates rises will slow, but the Reserve Bank warned councils may continue to consume more and more of people’s incomes, if their expenditur­e requiremen­ts continued.

In March, a survey of 48 councils’ planned rates rises in draft long-term plans by Local Government NZ, the lobbying body for councils, said homeowners were facing average rates rises of 15%.

Economist Brad Olsen said between 2002 and 2022, the average rates rise was 5.7% a year, far higher than inflation, but in 2023, the average had been 9.8%.

Trade Me Property’s latest Rental Price Index showed the national median weekly rent climbed to a record $650 in March, up 8.3% from $600 at the same time last year.

Trade Me Property sales director Gavin Lloyd said that while it was not the biggest annual increase seen, “it is unusual to see it this high in March”.

The Reserve Bank said a surge in immigratio­n had added 2.2% to the working-age population in the year to March 2024. That meant more competitio­n for existing rentals at a time when building new ones had slowed. “Migration is adding to demand in the economy, and increasing rents. Annual rent inflation is currently 4.7%, well above its 20-year average of 2.6%,” the Reserve Bank said.

Power companies have also been hiking their prices at a rate far higher than general inflation as a result of rising costs, and investment in greener power generation.

 ?? ?? Inflation is coming down, but in some pockets of household spending, it’s stubbornly high.
Inflation is coming down, but in some pockets of household spending, it’s stubbornly high.

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