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- Mar 17, 2009
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In theory, it sounds good, but in reality, its probably too late now. And to do it would be political suicide. the PAP has started on this slippery slope without realizing there is no turning back. ... They neither have the political will, nor the financial incentive to do so.
True, difficult to put the genie back in the bottle. LHL alone owns 3 other GCB apart from Rochalie Dr in his name, all in districts 9 & 10. The Lees/Kwas, the Pappy leadership and their cronies are so heavily vested in real estate that they will never cut the Gordian knot.
Actually the situation is not so bleak. Problem is high public housing prices. Using CPF funds for public housing – though it runs counter to the principle of superannuation – need not deplete funds if prices are kept low and leases short. After all we're agreed that there is no ownership here. It's purely a long-term rental for shelter.
In an overheated inflationary market, devaluation is not so bad. Main problem is negative equity and possible foreclosure, but there's a 10% buffer because of the 90% valuation limit for loan quantum (1st loan). That means prices can actually fall by 10% without owners going into negative equity.
I think a two-stage process is doable:
(1) Freeze new HDB flat prices for 10 years
This stabilizes prices in the secondary market, allows wages to catch up, makes flats more affordable for young people, and CPF funds to be replenished, without drastic dislocation to both equity and the private housing sector
(2) Sequester HDB flats from the open market, shorten lease and reduce prices
– no more resale of HDB flats on open market; all new flats to be sold back to HDB and remaining portion of lease redeemed
– shorten lease to 60 years: the average HDB flat can last only 50–60 years at most; why burden owners with ownership costs of maintenance and upgrading with long leases? Moreover, given our av. life expectancy of 82 years, most people will not live in their flats for more than 60 years.
– prices of new flats should be reduced and delinked from market pricing and land costs. Use prevailing rental rates and factor in state subsidy to price 60-year lease.
– allow remaining resale flats to continue to be traded on the open market until lease is up. If owners choose to sell resale flats back to HDB, then they will be compensated for the remaining lease based on market value. That way land is gradually freed up for new BTO flats.
End result: Flats become much more affordable, returns HDB to original aim of public housing, doesn't deplete CPF funds. Freeing up funds increases private enterprise, grows SME sector, increases purchasing power. Achieving soft landing for property prices lowers inflation and cost of living, prevents asset bubbles, increases wages as rent forms a smaller portion of business overheads.
The above can be done, if the political will can be summoned. But I don't see it happening as long as the Pappies are in power.
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