Home Property Govt won’t hit its new housing target: Treasury accidentally spills the trillion-dollar truth

Govt won’t hit its new housing target: Treasury accidentally spills the trillion-dollar truth

Internal Treasury advice to the Albanese government has been accidentally revealed through a Freedom of Information (FOI) slip-up — and it points to major policy (and hip-pocket) challenges ahead.

Internal Treasury advice to the Albanese government has been accidentally revealed through a Freedom of Information (FOI) slip-up — and it points to major policy (and hip-pocket) challenges ahead.

As first reported by the ABC, the Treasury’s “incoming government” brief to Treasurer Jim Chalmers and Housing Minister Clare O’Neil was released with redacted sections still visible in the document’s headings. Those headings revealed advice that the government’s flagship target to build 1.2 million homes over five years “would not be met” — and that Treasury had suggested adjusting the goal.

The FOI documents also showed that Treasury has modelled worst-case global economic scenarios, including a loss of confidence in the US dollar or the independence of the US Federal Reserve — a sign of increasing concern about global volatility.

The ABC says Treasury requested the documents be deleted after realising the mistake. However, the broadcaster has chosen to publish the findings, citing clear public interest.

You can read the full ABC story by Laura Tingle here.

Luke Hopewell

Luke Hopewell

Luke Hopewell is Head of Content and Digital Marketing at Associate Global Partners and oversees content strategy for Switzer Daily and Switzer Report. He was previously the head of editorial at Twitter Australia, the editor of cult tech site Gizmodo, launch editor of Business Insider's Australian edition, with stints various corporates like CBA and Telstra in-between. When he's not writing, he's getting outdoors and patting all the nice dogs he meets.

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