EPISODE · Feb 15, 2026 · 1H 2M
FET #70: Tim Sneesby is a real life town planner. Why is he making housing so unaffordable?
from Fresh Economic Thinking · host Cameron Murray
You may have heard that our town planning system of rules and institutions that govern land uses in cities and often across the country is stifling new housing production, causing high prices. But much of the commentary misunderstands how town planning rules operate. I chat with Sydney town planner Tim Sneesby about how the system works, from a strategic level of creating zones and desired outcomes at a broad level, including earmarking infrastructure locations, to the day-to-day operations of assessing applications against those broader plans.I also push a little on some of the potential perverse incentives—wouldn’t town planners prefer to create cumbersome rules to keep themselves in a job and make their roles valuable even if there is no (or negative!) social benefit from those rules?For example, this article notes a rise in town planners per new home developed and the economic cost of regulating so many aspects of building designs. Let me know what you think?All comments are personal views and not those of Tim’s employer or associated entities. As always, please like, share, comment, and subscribe. Thanks for your support. You can find Fresh Economic Thinking on YouTube, Spotify, and Apple Podcasts.Theme: Happy Swing by Serge Quadrado Music—Creative Commons Licence CC BY-NC 4.0Interested in learning more? Fresh Economic Thinking runs in-person and online workshops to help your organisation dig into the economic issues you face and learn powerful insights. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.fresheconomicthinking.com/subscribe
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FET #70: Tim Sneesby is a real life town planner. Why is he making housing so unaffordable?
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