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Hong Kong must grapple with question of housing supply

Anthony Cheung says to solve its housing crisis, Hong Kong must tackle the constraints that limit the adequate provision of affordable homes - and this means accepting trade-offs

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Hong Kong must grapple with question of housing supply

This year marks the 60th anniversary of public housing in Hong Kong. It all started with a huge squatter fire in Shek Kip Mei on December 25, 1953. Then, in 1972, the colonial governor, Murray MacLehose, launched an ambitious 10-year public housing programme to house 1.8 million people in permanent self-contained homes. The rest is history.

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Public housing has facilitated not only upward social mobility, especially with the addition of the Home Ownership Scheme (HOS), but also the rapid development of our now-thriving new towns like Sha Tin and Tuen Mun. It is a collective achievement that Hongkongers can rightly take pride in.

Yet, as we celebrate this success story, Hong Kong is, ironically, embroiled in a looming new housing crisis that does not square with its economic affluence, as evidenced by severe undersupply, high property prices and rents beyond the affordability of the general public, and the proliferation of subdivided units. Our younger generations are gravely discontented because they don't see any prospects of affording a home.

In the face of high housing prices, public housing has to perform a stronger lever function

These days, many commentators like to compare Hong Kong with Singapore, where some 82 per cent of its citizens live in government housing of one type or another. In Hong Kong, only close to half of the population are in either public rental housing or subsidised home ownership, while the rest are in private housing. Although the housing trajectories of the two cities are different, there is no reason why Hong Kong citizens should not aspire to adequate and affordable housing.

The newly released long-term housing strategy consultation document, "Building Consensus, Building Homes", sets a vision of providing adequate and affordable housing for each and every family in Hong Kong. In the coming decade, it is reckoned that some 470,000 new housing units have to be built.

The government has to play a proactive role under a "supply-led strategy", especially in public housing, with an initial 60:40 public-private split in new housing production. Within public housing, the ratio between public rental housing and subsidised home ownership should retain flexibility to respond to changing demand. In the face of high housing prices and rents in the private sector, public housing has to perform a stronger lever function.

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We must also maintain a stable housing market in line with our economic fundamentals. Hence, in face of undue market exuberance, the government stepped in last October and this February with demand management measures. Such exceptional measures are necessitated by unusual circumstances, but they do not by themselves solve the tight supply-demand imbalance, the solution to which must lie in a continuous and sustainable increase in supply.

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