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ON FRIDAY
DECEMBER 12, 2014
W
HAT
is themeaning of the
word “affordability”?
According to a business
dictionary, it is
a conclusion
drawn from the analysis of the life
cycle cost of a proposed acquisition;
that the purchase is in accordwith the
resources and long-termrequirements
of the acquirer
. A shorter and simpler
explanationwould be
one’s financial
means in relation to a purchase
.
CONTEXT AND CIRCUMSTANCE
With that, we probe a little further,
questioning one’s financial means where
house purchase is concerned. Is the
average income earner able to purchase a
roof over his head and live reasonably
comfortably today? Howmuch would he
or she need to earn? And if good
employment and better salaries are found
in the main cities and big towns, are there
affordable houses readily available in these
urban areas? What kind of price tags do
affordable houses come with? How
affordable is affordable? Ultimately, the big
question is, is there an issue where housing
affordability is concerned?
To answer all this is Dr Yeah KimLeng,
dean of the School of Business at theMalaysia
University of Science and Technology
(MUST). Yeah has aMasters in Business
Administration and holds a PhD in
Agricultural and Resource Economics,
specialising in development economics. He
was previously the group chief economist of a
local rating agency andmanaging director for
its research and consultancy firm. Prior to
that, he held the post of senior analyst at the
Institute of Strategic and International
StudiesMalaysia where he was involved in
research on various national economic
policies.
According toYeah,
housing affordability
is a complex socio-economic issuewith
important political implications
. “First, let
me explainwhat housing affordability is. It is
basically the ability or inability to own a
house or have a permanent roof over one’s
head,” he says. With that, we ask then, howdo
we knowwhen housing affordability becomes
amajor concern. “At the national level, we
track overall affordability in several ways.
One index compares house price increases
with income increases. If the ratio is below
one, then the rise in income has not kept pace
Housing
affordability
> Issues, effects and
areas toexamine
with house price increases, indicating a
decline in housing affordability. We can track
this by state and by housing segment.”
For a clearer picture, refer to the graphs
below taken froma research headed by Yeah
in 2012.
“Another index is calculated by assuming
that not more than half of the gross monthly
household income goes into repaying the loan
taken to buy the house. If there are a few
bread earners living in the same house who
contribute to the payment of the property,
then not more than 50%of their combined
income should go into paying the instalment/
rent of their house.” This index is useful to
provide a gauge on affordability by house
price and income segments,” explains Yeah.
POINTS INQUESTION
Yeah further shares about the issues
pertaining to housing affordability. He claims
there are
threemain issues
which are:
1) the rapid rise in house prices across all
segments;
2) insufficient supply tomeet demand; and
3) mis-match in the supply of affordable
homes.
“House prices have increased
tremendously, especially in the last five years.
Looking at house prices some 10 years or
more ago, there was a gradual increase of
Income and house price indexes
Source:NAPIC,CEIC
0
50
100
150
200
250
Index 2000=100
Income (GNI) per capita (2000=100)
HPI (2000=100)
KL: 1-1 1/2 Storey Terraced
KL: Condominium
House price increases have caught up with income increases
Affordability indexes
Source:NAPIC,CEIC
0.0
0.2
0.4
0.6
0.8
1.0
1.2
1.4
1.6
1.8
2.0
Income-to-HPI
raƟo
Income-to-KL
terrace house
price raƟo
Income-to-KL
condo price
raƟo
Rise
Fall
Steady decline in national-level affordability
about 3.2% in the prices every year. But
in the
last five years, the average annual
increase has risen to 9.7%
. At the rate
prices of houses are increasing, it is not
sustainable as the rate of income growth is
not rising as fast. And
if house prices
continue to spiral at the rate it is rising at,
the housingmarket will either face a soft
landing or amarket crash
, depending on
howhigh it peaks,” informs Yeah. The
positive outcome is that it will lead to
amore
gradual and sustainable rate of increase
in house pricing, one that is in linewith
the rise in income
.
Touching on point two, Yeah says,
“According to census figures published by the
Department of Statistics, there were 6.8
million households compared to the 4.8
million housing stock in 2012. Rental
properties made up 20%of the housing stock.
This means that the total number of
households that did not own a house summed
up to about 3.8million. We then subtract the
incoming supply of 0.73 million units, and the
planned supply of 0.62 million units, and
found there was still a housing shortage of 2.5
million homes.” Yeah then cited the 200,000
additional newhouseholds (based on yearly
estimated figures), concluding an estimated
shortfall of 2.7million housing units, still.
We deliberate the fact that house prices
within the KLmetropolitan city and Klang
Valley have sky-rocketed, somuch that it is
rare to find one within the city limits for less
than RM1 million. This leads to his third
point of which Yeah expounds, stating that
the
current housing supply in urban
areas are hugely beyond the reach of
the lowandmiddle income groups
.
“Research showed that 55%of the 6.8
million households have amonthly income
of less than RM4,000, which points to the
fact that this segment of society can only
afford houses priced around or below
RM360,000.” Interestingly yet
frighteningly, we arrive at many
implications on how just the
affordability
issues could slowly but surely affect
lifestyles, and eventually the socio-
economic health and political stability
of the country
. (See Graphs C andD)
ADDRESSING THE ISSUES
As it took years for such issues to crop up,
likewise, good foresight, the collaboration
of various industry-related players and
governing bodies, effectivemonitoring of
enforced rules and time, can bring positive
change. “
Monetary, fiscal and housing
policies need to be aligned, looked into
and perhaps fine-tuned to smoothen out
soaring house prices so it does not exceed
an average of 3% to 4%annually over
several years
. This can be achieved through
a combination of supply-side and demand-
sidemeasures,” Yeah recommends. On the
supply side, he adds that givenMalaysia’s
relatively lowpopulation density, the
challenge is
to increase supply of homes
that are priced to the pockets of the
masses
. “There is a need to cap expectations
and sentiments that house prices only go
north. But as seen in the recent property
market crash in the developed economies,
prices can fall 30-70%. On the demand-side,
rising house prices have ignited speculative
demand, especially for those who see
property investment as a hedge against
inflation,” he adds.
Yeah also raises the fact that we must be
aware that urban housing trends and lifestyle
changes need to cater to the ever-changing
demographic needs and patterns. He urges
the government to intervene, especially to
boost the chunk of the housing shortage
problem, which is to
accommodate those
in the lowandmiddle income segments
with affordable housing, especially in
urban areas
. For a start, he highlights some
areas that could be examined and further
explored, such as:
provision of adequate and cost-effective
basic amenities and transport
infrastructure;
release of state-owned land for housing;
establishment of public-private
partnerships in township developments;
promotion of industrialised building
systems (IBS); and
innovations in low- and medium-cost
building design, construction and
financing.
Still, although figures and charts may
determine one’s capability of owning a house,
there are other factors to bear inmind – the
list of additional expenses that come with
owning a house and running a home. These
include electricity, water and sewage bills,
not forgetting the twice-yearly property
assessment tax and annual quit rent. For
owners of high-rise units, there is the
management, maintenance and parking fees,
along with today’s internet, telephone and
cable or satellite TV charges, plus a longer list
of household and lifestyle expenses, which
are higher if one has a family to upkeep.
** Research and graphs are based on figures
taken fromaDepartment of Statistics survey
done in 2012.
X
X
X
X
X
Affordability by income groups
Source:HouseholdIncomeSurvey2012,DOSM;calculations byauthor
342
1,203
1,087
1,142
759
308
390
663
0
200,000
400,000
600,000
800,000
1,000,000
1,200,000
0
200
400
600
800
1,000
1,200
1,400
Affordable house
price (RM)
'000 households
Incomegroup(monthlyincome inRM)
EsƟmated number of households ('000)
Affordable price based on 3x annual income (RM)
Affordable price based on 5x annual income (RM)
Affordable price based on 6x income (RM)
Max house price based on loan eligibility (RM)
533
410
House price trend
Malaysia’s HPI and KL average price trends
Source: BIS; BNM
93.4
185.9
RM319,529
0
100,000
200,000
300,000
400,000
500,000
600,000
700,000
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
140
160
180
200
RM/dwelling
HPI
2000=100
HPI (naƟonal, 2000=100)
National
-
level House Price Index (HPI) rose 85.9% between 2000
and 2H2013, or a compound annual growth rate of 8.7% pa
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