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Research shows property resilience after past recessions

May 21, 2020 BY

PIPA chair Peter Koulizos.

New research and analysis by the Property Investment Professionals of Australia (PIPA) has found house prices increased by as much as 100 per cent in the five years after the most recent recessions.

The research, conducted by PIPA chair Peter Koulizos, analysed annual median house price and index data for seven consecutive years including the start of each recession or economic downturn from 1973 to the GFC.
The data found that five years after each of the recessions or economic downturns over that time period, capital city house prices often increased significantly.
“In fact, looking back over the past nearly 50 years, house prices were higher five years after a recession or downturn each time,” Mr Koulizos said.
“Some locations performed better than others, mostly likely due to local economic factors after each period.
“However, the research shows that talk of impending property ‘doom’ has never happened in recent history – and these recessions or downturns lasted multiple years rather than a few months.”
Five years after the recession of 1973 to 1975, Sydney median house prices had increased 100.7 per cent, followed by Perth and then Brisbane, the PIPA research found.
However, a few years later, following the economic downturn of 1982 and 1983, it was Melbourne who was leading the property pack with median house price growth of 67.7 per cent, with many other capital cities not far behind with growth in the 50 per cent to 64 per cent range.
“When it came to the ‘recession we had to have’, Darwin produced median house price growth of 47.3 per cent in the following five years, with Perth the second-place getter again,” Mr Koulizos said.
“Following the GFC, as we all know, Sydney was again the front-runner within five years as the start of its property boom started to take shape.”
Mr Koulizos said there were periods of annual house price falls in many capital cities over the three most recent economic downturns, but the price reductions were never sustained nor prolonged.
“An interesting point to that is that in 2011, every capital city recorded a fall in its house price index, which was simply when the GFC stimulus money ran out.”