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Hongkee no $$$ so break law and live in illegal places

McDollar

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https://www.rt.com/business/437387-hong-kong-housing-law-violation/

Hong Kong's soaring house prices force millennials to break law
Published time: 1 Sep, 2018 06:28
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© Getty Images
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Young Hongkongers have to violate the law by living in industrial buildings, as the insane prices for property in the region make it difficult to afford rent, much less buy a house.
Surging house prices have pushed rents to record levels. Hong Kong is the world's priciest home market, and one of the most densely populated cities across the globe. The average home in the region can reportedly cost 19.4 times the gross annual median income, while renting a tiny flat could cost around $3500 per month.
So, it is no wonder that younger residents prefer to take a risk and rent spaces, unallotted for living, just to save some cash.
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© Robert van der Hilst / Getty Images
“The rents nowadays are very unreasonable,” 32-year-old photographer Wah Lee, who shares his building with a Chinese herbal-oil storage unit, a commercial kitchen pumping out roast meats and a roommate, told Bloomberg. “There’s no way for me to afford those residential units.”
Lee and his roommate pay about $1,400 per month, which is less than half what landlords commonly ask for living in a standard residential unit. The young people are enjoying a small kitchen and private bathroom along with high ceilings and large windows that are usually features of apartments with an area of more than 300 square meters.
The regional authorities are currently trying to tame sky-high property prices and avert social unrest by increasing land supply. However, allowing people to legally live in industrial constructions is not an option. The government is reportedly working on reclaiming more land near Victoria Harbour or building new houses on top of a container terminal.

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© Ingo Schulz / Global Look Press
“Industrial buildings are not designed to be lived in,” Chau Kwong Wing, Chair Professor of Real Estate and Construction at the University of Hong Kong and a member of the task force on land supply told the agency. “It involves safety concerns.”
Nearly 12,000 people lived in industrial buildings in 2016, according to research carried out by the Society for Community Organization. The group hasn’t updated the information so far, but the number is obviously higher, as prices in the Hong Kong property market continue to trend upward with more and more people arrive annually into one of the Asia’s largest financial centers.
 

Kinanana

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Singaporeans should be grateful to PAP. Look at these Hongkies, the government does nothing for their citizens! Dumbfuck Oppies who complain and rant daily...This is concrete evidence that PAP has done a wonderful job for Singapore and Singaporeans!
 

eatshitndie

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Singaporeans should be grateful to PAP. Look at these Hongkies, the government does nothing for their citizens! Dumbfuck Oppies who complain and rant daily...This is concrete evidence that PAP has done a wonderful job for Singapore and Singaporeans!
same in the sf bay area and vancouver. unless millennials strike lottery jackpots or vested their multi-million stock options via an ipo, they don’t have a chance to secure a home. even renting an apartment will set them back more than half their pay (about 69%). they can never dream of saving enough to win any bids for a home when median home purchases are easily over a million with all-in cash. even for tech worker couples earning six point nine figure incums, good pay alone is not enough to secure a home. and germany is going the same way. this is why i’m convinced that 99-yr tenancy, not necessarily home ownership, is the best solution for today’s housing crunch in top cities that attract too many millenials due to the abundance of high paying jobs. the hdb model by far is the best for these cities. sf, hk, vancouver, london try their incompetent hands at building affordable pubic housing, but they fail miserably at every turn. sinkies are truly lucky.
 
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