frequently asked question

What can we do about land banking?

Land banking is only possible where development opportunities are scarce. The strongest antidote to land banking, then, is broad upzoning.   

Broad upzoning

As highlighted in our Missing Middle Housing Targets report, limited zoned capacity creates the potential for land speculation and land banking. Where there are only a few plots of land where it is possible to build, a small number of speculators can feasibly control and exploit that scarcity to inflate prices. This creates a vicious cycle where the cost of land is driven up, making it harder for developers to build, and for people to buy homes.

The New Zealand Productivity Commission highlighted this in their 'Using land for housing' report:

“Where expected demand is high, or land is scarce, the incentives to hold land can be strong. Land banking is therefore a symptom, rather than a primary cause, of land supply shortages. Strategies to encourage owners of land to develop it for housing rather than holding it should focus on

  • increasing certainty about what can be developed on a site;
  • reducing the scarcity value of land, through a commitment to ensuring that zoning and servicing land is responsive to demand; and
  • influencing holding costs, at the margin, to reduce the expected future returns on land development”

The certainty is why a piece of land plus an approval is worth so much more than just the land alone is because it is hard, and time consuming, and tedious to get a permit. 

YIMBY Melbourne's proposals aim to make the permit process easier and faster to navigate. This will reduce the value of any given permit, and in turn reduce the incentive to 'bank' any given approval on any given piece of land.

In addition to broad upzoning, many of our other proposed policies would work to strongly discourage land banking. We will give two additional examples: mandatory height controls, and a land value tax.

Mandatory height controls

Our proposed Missing Middle Zone—six storeys mixed-use around fixed rail—notably has a mandatory height limit. This gives developers certainty about what can be built: it removes the wiggle room about what height a council might approve based on the specifics of the site and nearby developments. 

Mandatory height limits, then, remove the potential for land speculation, because each stakeholder—council, landowners, developers, and the community—has the same understanding of what size build is possible.

Land value tax 

A robust tax on the value of land, excluding any buildings or improvements on that land, also discourages speculation. This is because the landowner has to pay the same amount of tax regardless of whether they choose to develop the site. 

Under a strong land value tax, landowners will rack up a much larger tax bill over the course of holding the land without developing it for productive use.

Your hottest YIMBY Queries, Answered

Frequently Asked Questions

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Are YIMBYs aligned with any political parties?
Aren't Melbourne apartments low-quality? Why do you want more of them?
Aren't tax concessions the biggest cause of the housing crisis? Why focus on zoning and planning?
Can't we just keep building greenfield/outer suburban developments?
Can't we just stop foreign investment to combat the housing crisis?
Can't we just stop immigration to solve the housing crisis?
Do you support stronger renter protections?
Doesn't new development just push poor people out of the city?
Don't high permit approval rates show that planning isn't the issue?
How does market-rate housing supply benefit those most in need?
Isn't zoning and planning reform just a giveaway to developers?
Local councillors are democratically elected representatives. What’s wrong with them having final decision-making powers over planning matters?
Loosening planning controls may result in more ugly modern buildings. Shouldn't new buildings be beautiful?
Shouldn't the local community get the final say on what happens in their "backyard"?
There are already so many apartments. Do we need more?
What about parking? Won't new developments create massive congestion in our cities?
What about those one million vacant homes?
What can we do about land banking?
What if I don’t want to live in an apartment?
What's the problem with building setbacks?
Why build denser cities? Isn't it better to decentralise?
Why can't the government just build public housing for all?
Why did rental prices go up during COVID?
Why do you hold councils accountable for housing supply delivery?
Why does YIMBY Melbourne have such a problem with heritage overlays?
Why doesn't YIMBY Melbourne endorse mandatory inclusionary zoning?