Snap Insight: Can Singapore's revamped BTO housing framework rein in the lottery effect?

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HDB owners often benefit from high resale prices if their flats are in choice locations. It's not a bad thing that Singapore’s public housing is in high demand, says the Institute of Policy Studies’ Woo Jun Jie.

highlighted three major aims of Singapore’s public housing programme: Affordability, maintaining a good social mix, and keeping the system fair.

These three objectives are essentially the public housing trinity that form the core foundation of a successful programme that houses 80 per cent of Singapore's residents. They have also driven Singapore’s public housing policy design. To achieve affordability, HDB has provided substantial subsidies and grants, particularly to first-time home buyers. For social mixing, the ethnic integration programme has ensured a good racial mix in our neighbourhoods, preventing the formation of ethnic enclaves.

It is, however, the third pillar of fair outcomes that has proven to be more tricky. It is well-known that successful BTO applicants in highly sought-after neighbourhoods often enjoy aA good example of this is Pinnacle@Duxton, where a four-room unit sold for S$1.41 million this month, setting a record for the most expensive four-room flat sold to date. This is more than three times the amount that it was initially sold for.

The new BTO classification framework is meant to address that third pillar of Singapore’s public housing trinity - equal outcomes - by blunting the lottery effect.

Source: Real Estate Daily Report (realestatedailyreport.net)

 

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