Recent Trends in Housing Accessiblity and Affordability
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D epartm entofEconom ics Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences SingaporeCentreforA ppliedandPolicyEconom ics Home About SCAPE Steering Committee Staff Directory Working Papers Events Newspaper Articles Econometric Studies Unit Housing affordability in Singapore Recent trends in Housing Accessibility and Affordability Housing is accessible if the accessibility ratio <=1.0. Housing is affordable if the affordability ratio <=0.3. An upward trend of these ratios indicates deteriorating housing accessibility and affordability. Charts below show the trends in housing accessibility and affordability over the quarters of 2011 and 2013. For HDB housing median re-sale price and median household income are used in the computations. For private housing median price and household income at the 80th income percentile are used in the computations. Median house prices are taken from a list of regional prices. Note that some regions do not register any transaction in some quarters. The graphs and computations across regions for different income deciles lead to the following general observations. (Some specific comments are inserted below the charts.) (i) For young HDB re-sale home buyers the main problem with rising house prices is housing accessibility, not so much long-run affordability. For example, a 4-room HDB re-sale flat in expensive areas is inaccessible to income groups below the 30th percentile. Even the 2-room and 3-room HDB apartments in low-priced areas like Yishun and Woodlands are inaccessible to low income groups below the 20th percentile. It should be noted that the estimated savings by age 29 for low income groups appear too optimistic. This means that the accessibility problem may be severe than what our estimates indicate. (ii) Private residential properties are obviously meant for the very rich. Again accessibility is a more severe problem than long-run affordability. Median priced private apartments and condos have become inaccessible even for those in the 80th income percentile group. (iii) Rising mortgage rates obviously lower long-run housing affordability. Reduced housing affordability means reduced residual income for other living expenses. Chart 1 shows that median priced HDB re-sale units are accessible to median income households but accessibility in 2013Q3 was below the level observed at the beginning of 2011. Chart 2 shows that since 2012 median priced private units have fallen outside the accessible range even for the households in the 80th income percentile. HOME DEPARTMENT PEOPLE PUBLICATIONS EVENTS GRADUATE UNDERGRADUATE CENTRE/UNIT myEMAIL IVLE LIBRARY MAPS CALENDAR SITEMAP CONTACT Page 1 of 2 NUS Department of Economics 14/11/2013 http://www.fas.nus.edu.sg/ecs/scape/recenttrend.html
Transcript of Recent Trends in Housing Accessiblity and Affordability
Departm ent of Econom ics
Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences
Singapore Centre for Applied and Policy Econom ics
Home
About SCAPE
Steering Committee
Staff Directory
Working Papers
Events
Newspaper Articles
Econometric Studies Unit
Housing affordability in Singapore
Recent trends in Housing Accessibility and Affordability
Housing is accessible if the accessibility ratio
Charts 3 and 4 show that median priced HDB re-sale units are
well within the long-run affordability range for the median income
group. Obviously rising mortgage rates will adversely affect
affordability.
Charts 5 and 6 show that only the median priced private
apartments and condos are within the long-run affordability range
for the households in the 80th income percentile group. They will
be worse-off if the mortgage rates go up.