Perth Real Estate Market: What Growth is Sustainable? A Historical Perspective
Perth Real Estate Market: What Growth is Sustainable? A Historical Perspective
The question of sustainable growth in the Perth real estate market is one that consistently sparks debate among agents, investors, and homeowners alike. To gain a deeper understanding, it's often insightful to look back at the market's historical rhythm, a pattern that, for a time, seemed surprisingly consistent.
My journey in real estate began in the year 2000, a time when I was a fresh-faced, newly registered agent, eager to absorb all the industry knowledge I could. As part of the mandatory training, a comment was made by a seasoned trainer that, at the time, felt like an off-hand remark: "Historically, the Perth market grows at around 7% per year." I admit, I initially took the comment with a pinch of salt, filing it away as an industry anecdote rather than a reliable metric. For almost a decade, I largely forgot about it.
It wasn't until the protracted period of market decline between approximately 2015 and 2020 that this seemingly arbitrary figure resurfaced in my memory. Driven by curiosity and a desire to understand the depth of the downturn, I decided to look at the historical data to see how the market had actually tracked against that old 7% benchmark.
What the data showed was fascinating. The trainer's assertion was remarkably accurate for the period leading up to the great Western Australian mining boom of the early to mid-2000s. The market seemed to maintain a stable, almost predictable trajectory, hovering close to that 7% annual average.
However, the boom period fundamentally disrupted this pattern. Fuelled by massive investment, population influx, and unprecedented economic activity, the Perth market took off, tracking well above the theoretical 7% growth rate for several years. This period demonstrated the market's potential for explosive, albeit unsustainable, short-term surges.
The subsequent events proved how quickly the momentum could reverse. The Global Financial Crisis (GFC) slowed things down considerably, but it was the dramatic drop in the iron ore price around 2014-2015 that initiated the sustained five-year slump. During this downturn, annual growth was not just flat; in many years, it was negative, eroding years of previous gains.
The lingering effects of that five-year sustained downward trend have been profound. Despite the recent surge of positive growth—the last four or five years—the market has still struggled to fully catch up to the long-term, compounded 7% year-on-year average.
Consider this stark statistic: it took until the 2021/2022 financial year for the median Perth house price to merely return to the level it had reached in 2015. This means that for a significant portion of the last decade, genuine capital growth was nonexistent. We have only truly experienced three to four years of substantial, positive growth since that recovery milestone was hit.Re-evaluating the 7% Metric
I fully appreciate that the 7% figure is an arbitrary historical average, and it's certainly greater than the average rate of inflation over that same long period. Yet, it serves as a powerful historical reference point.
The fact remains that for the earlier period—perhaps 25 to 35 years ago—the market appears to have been more stable and predictable, and yet, the average compounded growth over the long term was greater than what we've witnessed since the massive volatility of the mining boom and subsequent bust.
Crucially, this simple 7% metric doesn't account for the multitude of other critical economic factors that influence housing affordability and growth today, such as:
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Wages Growth: If property prices grew at 7% but wages only grew at 2-3%, affordability would quickly collapse.
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Interest Rates: In the period where 7% growth was a benchmark, interest rates were often significantly higher than the near-zero rates experienced for much of the last decade. Lower interest rates can support higher property prices, but rising rates today exert significant downward pressure on borrowing capacity and demand.
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Supply and Demand Dynamics: Current low vacancy rates and limited housing stock are primary drivers of recent growth, a factor that overshadows historical averages.
In conclusion, while the Perth market is currently in a strong uptrend, driven by unique post-pandemic and resource-sector factors, the historical 7% figure reminds us of a time when growth was potentially more measured, stable, and ultimately, delivered greater compounded returns over the long haul. The central question for today's market remains whether the recent explosive growth can transition into a sustainable, long-term trajectory without the massive correction that followed the last great boom.