Yushui Village in Lijiang, Yunnan, with snow mountain backdrop and cascading waterfalls.
4/12/2010
Housing, keeping the issue alive
Sue Ann Chia keeps the flame of unhappiness in housing alive by another article in the ST today. She calls on the govt to rethink and find sustainable answers to this problem. But should the govt when it does not see any problem? To the govt, or to Mah Bow Tan, the problem is with the choosy and hard to please flat applicants.
Accepted that we have a good public housing system to start with, but are they flawless? One of the flaws that the system has morphed into is the application procedure. Apply when there is a new launch. If the applicant is unsuccessful, reapply and start anew. This procedure seriously affect the young professionals as their salaries could quickly got out of the $8k ceiling imposed by HDB within a few years from graduation. They are then forced to buy from the red hot resale market or private housing. Without much cash savings, they are hard put to foot the deposit.
The new system in a way deprived these young professionals from buying their first flat from HDB if they did not quickly grab one that comes along. And this ignores those they were slow in courting a spouse and could not even apply in the first place. So it is their fault, or so they are high income earners and must buy more expensive housing. But many are prudent young people who are contented with just a 4 rm HDB flat. They are not demanding, just want to buy their first home without killing themselves with a big mortgage.
So what's wrong with that? Their fault or HDB's fault? The most badly affected is this group of young professionals and rightly they should kick the arse of HDB and its procedures. In the old system, the application stayed with the HDB while waiting for the flat, using the income on registration.
Maybe HDB may want to reconsider the first bite of the HDB cherry to all NS men regardless of their income. They have done their national service.
So long as foreigners are invited to become citizens, the housing problem will remain to be an issue to most Singaporeans.
ReplyDeletepatriot
So long as the Government does not see it as an issue, it will be kept alive for sure.
ReplyDeleteThe article in the ST is really a breath of fresh air - or is it ? - Is this the signal that MBT will be next to go ?
ReplyDeleteDon't bet on it. I am sure he is very confident of winning his GRC with his housing policy.
ReplyDelete