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Saving a decent deposit may be the biggest hurdle facing people trying to buy their first home.
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However, the current mix of ultra-low interest rates and government policies that favour homeowners is making life especially hard for people saving a deposit, as opposed to those who already own a property and are paying off a loan.
For a household with average income, it takes a record eight years to save up a 20 per cent deposit for a typically priced Melbourne home, recent ANZ analysis found.
It is even worse in Sydney, where it takes a whopping 9.2 years, a near record for that city.
Expressed another way, the share of annual income needed for a deposit for a median-priced home is at a record high, as this week's graph shows.
It is a different story for people who already have a home loan, thanks to the plunge in interest rates.
The RBA has said households with new home loans are spending a lower share of their income on mortgage repayments than the average over the past decade.
The uphill battle facing people trying to save a deposit is being made worse by record low interest rates, and a tax system that tends to favour home ownership.
Not only have record low interest rates put a rocket under house prices in Sydney and Melbourne, saving is harder because bank deposit interest rates have been slashed.
Making things even tougher, the interest earned on a savings account is taxed at the marginal rate, so after inflation there's a good chance you're going backwards.
Someone who already has a home loan, in contrast, can use an offset account to, in effect, earn an interest rate equal to their mortgage rate. This will inevitably be higher than a bank would pay on deposits.
The money held in an offset account is deducted from the mortgage when the bank is calculating monthly interest repayments.
In effect, it means a homeowner can earn an interest rate equal to their mortgage rate, which might be a bit less than 5 per cent today. What is more, that is an after-tax return.
There have been some attempts to help people save deposits more easily, such as first home saver accounts, a Rudd government initiative that gave people saving a deposit tax breaks and co-contributions from government.
However, these were scrapped from July, after disappointing take-up rates.
Groups such as the Customer Owned Banking Association argue policymakers should look at revisiting some sort of scheme to help first home buyers save up a deposit more tax effectively.
With home ownership and all the financial advantages it brings moving more out of reach for many, it is a good argument that deserves serious consideration.