Statistics are shown for this demographic
Māori electorate
Electorate
Response rates from 331 9300 voters.
69% Yes |
31% No |
65% Yes |
23% No |
4% Yes, reduce first home deposits to 1-5% |
8% No, ban foreigners from purchasing investment properties instead |
0% Yes, reduce first home deposits to 0% |
Trend of support over time for each answer from 331 9300 voters.
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Trend of how important this issue is for 331 9300 voters.
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Unique answers from 9300 voters whose views went beyond the provided options.
@9F7HD2H1yr1Y
Yes, and place a cap on interest rates on low deposit buyers.
@9DMSH5C1yr1Y
Yes, reduce first home deposits to 1-5% as well as ban non citizens or residents from purchasing investment properties. Create a limit on how many properties a person can own, do a government buy back of houses from those people that exceed the limit and then repurpose those houses in a rent-to-own scheme to stabilise the market.
@9DBK32C1yr1Y
Yes. we need to make apartments cheap here for starters. we need to bring down the deposit amount. we need to regulate the banks forthmost. We need to bring back the NZ govt housing corporation. First home buyers should be able to get a loan from the government and pay back whatever the natural inflation rate is, so the govt doesnt make money but it doesnt loose money. we need to look at singapore and how the rules around house building. the government could give tax incentives to build high quality and affordable apartment buildings. there is a lot that can be done but we dont have the political will here.
@9D84MNF1yr1Y
Yes reduce first home deposits to 5%, as long as there is ample time to pay off a mortgage over the period of their life e.g. 20-30's = 40 year mortgage, 40-50s = 25-35 year mortgage, 60s = 10-15 year mortgage
@9RWHKMK4mos4MO
No, and this questions seems to be repeated. The govt should not get itself into further debt with a programme it will be unable to manage well.
@9K43GD29mos9MO
No, build enough new decent houses so that there is less demand, and prices come down instead of throwing money all over the place
@9HNLX3T11mos11MO
Yes but limit help to encourage first-home buyers to contribute to the economy by working and saving up
@9G6YBQC1yr1Y
No, the fixation on home ownership is relatively modern. Instead more effort should go into stronger rights/protections for renters.