On Sunday (9 Sep), Straits Times Opinion Editor Chua Mui Hoong wrote an opinion piece entitled ‘Why HDB flat dwellers have the best of both worlds‘. She was giving her views to the recent debate on whether owners of HDB flats really “own” their property, or are just leasing it for the long term with a prepaid rent given the lease agreement.

The Opinion Editor believes that the no-so-simply answer is “both”.

Flat owners have “purchased their properties on a leasehold term” while HDB remains a “super landlord”. In her view, this is not a bad thing as this “carries a lot of benefits to HDB flat buyers as the former spends billions to “upkeep, upgrade and maintain the value of HDB flats”.

She also went on to talk about the “special relationship” of “promise and trust”  that HDB owners had with the PAP government. While she acknowledged that the asset enhancement policy in the 90s went “overboard” and people believed that the government would bail them out leases would eventually run out, HDB ultimately fulfilled the promises of home ownership for the masses.

Even recently, she feels, the PAP government “takes that bond of trust very seriously”. This is why they have introduced the HIP II and VERS to “sooth concerns and to assure flat buyers their home values will be protected” long before they are actually required.

Furthermore, she believes that the existing Home Improvement Program is a blessing for home owners. She gave an example of how HDB had repaired spiraling and structural cracks, changed the waste and soil discharge stack, and new drying rack at zero cost to the HDB owner under this scheme.

Ultimately, she “would not be too concerned about whether she owned or leased the flat, so long as the HDB lessor is prepared to continue taking care these upgrading as [her] flat ages, and offer them at highly subsidized pries.”

Perhaps Miss Chua is missing the whole point.

An “asset enhancement promise” – how badly has it failed?

In 1992, the then-PM Goh Chok Tong stressed the importance of supporting government upgrading of HDB flats. “It is in your interest to ensure that the value of your flats continue to rise. Every 10% increase in the value of your flat means a huge increase of several thousand dollars in your wealth.”

Later in 1994, the late Lee Kuan Yew said “I would start off with a five-room or an HDB executive… Quickly, before my income ceiling takes me beyond that. You buy a flat in Bishan, it’s going today for half a million. So I would get there first, stay five years, seven years, and then move out.”

At the completion ceremony for upgrading at Kim Keat in 1995, Goh noted with pride that prices there had doubled in the last three years. The 1990s were therefore “a new phase where the Government increases your asset value through the Assets Enhancement Programme”.

In the long term, this has created a culture where homeowners had used monies meant for their retirement (i.e. CPF Funds) to purchase their properties, believing that their flats would ultimately go up in value and provide for their retirement.

2014 working paper by the Institute of Policy Studies quoted sources which found that – on average – 44% of CPF savings had gone towards the purchase of residential and investment properties. In addition, Singaporean households typically had 47% of their total assets in the form of housing.

In a more revent Facebook post, former NTUC CEO Tan Kin Lian said that his created a situation where people “[relied] on the appreciation of their HDB flats to compensate for the low rate of interest paid by CPF for their retirement funds”.

The revelation by MND Minister Lawrence Wong last March that the value of flats would revert to zero once they hit the tail-end of their leases has therefore ripped this entire belief apart. This is something that Miss Chua has failed to mention in her opinion piece.

HIP II and VERS: A lacking in details while not understanding how it work?

There are only two things that we know about VERS: it would not be as generous as SERS while it requires that the flat owners vote for it. Other than that, there would not be much information as the planning is still being done while details will be released in 20 years time.

Therefore, it would not be an overstatement to say that there are multiple problems with VERS.

First, the issue with older flats starting their rapid decline in prices once they hit 40 years of age is not resolved. By comparison, VERS would only begin when flats hit 70 years of age. How does one deal with a declining home price when their flats have, say, 35 years left on their lease?

Based on current estimates, the value of such flats would already have fallen by as much as 80% – one could consider that landed properties at Jalan Chempaka Kuning – which have 17 years left on their leases – are worth around $500,000 compared to $3.5 million for similar properties elsewhere with long leases remaining.

Given that quantum of flats – 280,000 of them which would reach 40 years old in the next decade – this would prove a ticking time bomb. A plan that begins only in 20 years’ time would therefore be more fluff than real substance in helping these affected owners.

Finally, the existing lease-and-buyback scheme that is already in place is not generous. Given that VERS would not be as generous as SERS – and that average Singaporeans had placed a large sum of their net worth in an asset that looks to decline – how would this affect the masses?

A sobering conclusion?

Ultimately, Singaporeans were under the impression that their HDB flats would appreciate in value and they could rely on this for retirement. But this promise has been broken and HIP II and VERS remain a long time away with little concrete details at this point in time.

My view is that the PAP is merely buying time, knowing that the elections are a year or two away.

 

Subscribe
Notify of
0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
You May Also Like

连氏基金长期护理研究(2)– 终身护保索赔条件严苛 学者:依级别赔付扩大安全网

连氏基金会和国立大学社会科学研究所两位助理教授何琳贻和黄瑞莲,针对我国长期护理前景进行研究。 除了昨日《海峡时报》所报导,强调更多年长者选择居家或中心式看护服务,且成本高昂,显示有必要提升现有社会保障机制。有关研究报告也针对现有医疗保健政策提供建议,特别呼吁应改善终身护保计划(CareShield Life)的受保赔付条件,让保户获得较广泛的保障。 报告列举出一些新的看护政策或计划逐步涌现,例如整合式居家和日顾计划(IHDC),让那些无法离开住家的年长者,中心能暂时派看护人员到家服务,至于那些在家护理者,则被鼓励在行动便利下能转移到中心接受看护。 至于“活跃乐龄中心”也在新的公共组屋区提供整合式乐龄看护服务,例如日顾、复健和代送日用品等。 “近年来,私人领域填补了乐龄看护领域的空洞,特别是针对想获得更多元和专属服务的中产和中上阶级。自愿福利组织也开始与私人业者合作。” 该研究发现,缔造获颁关系是实现规模经济和专业化的有效手段,同时也能落实提供全方位和持续性服务的目标。研究也认为,社会与家庭发展部把社会关怀任务,转交给卫生声部,使得看护领域获得更集中的规划和精简化,有望使该领域受惠。 研究报告欢迎政府推出终身护保计划,在应对长期护理成本日益攀升,提供民众保障。然而研究也点出其问题,包括终身健保符合赔付的条件严苛、相对较低的保赔和妇女需支付出更高保费。 去年仅6.6巴仙长者严重伤残 保户需符合严重伤残资格,即日常起居至少三项无法自理,才能领取每月600新元的赔付。然而,报告指出在2017年,只有6.6巴仙长者—约3万4千人面临严重伤残情况。这意味着,有大部分人都在符合申请赔付的范围外。 Elaine Ho指出,许多新加坡人的长期护理可能面对保障不足。在2017年,有三分之一年龄介于40至84岁人士,仍未购买基础乐龄健保(ElderShield)。…

女佣遭非法调派 2017-19年平均550投诉

前女佣巴蒂被指偷窃,终于在上周沉冤得雪。不过人力部指在2017年至2019年之间,当局年均接获550起女佣遭雇主或其家属非法调派的投诉! 其中76巴仙投诉,是由第三方揭发,其余则是由女佣本身提出。 据人力部昨日(9月8日)所发文告,每年因投诉而遭到当局对付的雇主平均有155人,每年有16名雇主接到3300元至2万4000元不等的罚款。 平均每年有80人接获警告(Caution Notice),以及60人接获劝告信函(Advisory Notice)。 劝告信函主要是给予没有明确证明女佣遭非法调派的雇主,而针对偶尔或短时间违法并被发现的雇主,当局会发出警告信,强烈提醒雇主若再犯将会面对执法行动对付。 “人力部认真看待每项指控,并对其进行调查。在大多数情况下,当我们和外籍女佣作进一步了解时,会发现他们和照顾人士(通常是儿童或老人家)都被安置在亲戚家,以便继续照顾他们。 只要外籍女佣接受有关安排,并且不要求他们执行两个家庭的家务活,还照顾到他们的福祉,那么人力部就允许这样做。” 当局也促请雇主们,为了避免不必要的误解或纠纷,应该和女佣们共同商定工作范围。 曾接获巴蒂投诉 此外,人力部也证实曾于2017年10月接到巴蒂的投诉,指在2016年9月至10月,以及2012年和2013年期间,她曾被非法调派到廖文良儿子的朱家河办公室工作。…

Posters at City Hall MRT question the consumption of meat

Posters at City Hall MRT station pair a pet and a farmed…