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How Hong Kong’s Sky-High Home Prices Feed the Unrest

Why’s property in Hong Kong so expensive? 

How Hong Kong’s Sky-High Home Prices Feed the Unrest
A woman walks past residential houses in a village in the Sai Kung district of Hong Kong, China. (Photographer: Paul Yeung/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- Hong Kong’s protests aren’t just about freedom and democracy. Widening inequality has long contributed to tension in the city, and nothing exemplifies the divide between the haves and have-nots better than the sky-high cost of residential property. Developers, mostly owned by local billionaire families, wield great market power. Improving housing affordability is seen by both the government and citizens as crucial to easing political strains.

1. Just how expensive is property?

Hong Kong’s real estate has for years been ranked the world’s least affordable. For example, a one-bedroom unit in Tuen Mun in the New Territories -- about an hour by subway from Central, the main business district -- costs the same as a two-bedroom apartment on New York’s upscale Upper East Side. Prices in Hong Kong have more than doubled in the past decade. According to Demographia, it takes almost 21 years of an average household’s entire income to purchase a home, compared with 11.9 years in Vancouver and 8.2 years in London. Renting is hardly more palatable. Rates for apartments in the ex-British colony are higher than for similar-sized dwellings in San Francisco, New York City and Zurich.

How Hong Kong’s Sky-High Home Prices Feed the Unrest

2. Why’s it so expensive?

At first glance, it’s a simple supply-demand mismatch. Hong Kong crams 7.5 million people into 427 square miles (1,105 square kilometers) -- roughly the same size as Los Angeles with its 3.9 million people. What’s more, less than 25% of the territory is developed, with 40% of it country parks or nature reserves. That makes Hong Kong one of the world’s most densely populated regions with 17,311 people per square mile. But there’s more to it than that. The city has long been a popular destination for Chinese property investors, while the constant influx of mainland immigrants has underpinned housing demand. There’s also a view among local owner-occupiers, borne out by the relentless climb of home prices, that real estate is a one-way bet.

3. How reliant is the government on real estate?

Heavily. Being a low-tax economy, land sales comprised 27% of government revenue in 2018, the biggest single source of funding. The proceeds pay for infrastructure, from building bridges and highways to rolling out IT systems. The city’s property tycoons also hold great sway in local politics. Prominent developers including Li Ka-shing and Sun Hung Kai Properties Ltd.’s Adam Kwok are among the exclusive 1,200-member election committee that voted for the city’s chief executive, Carrie Lam, in the last election. Then, some 90% of voters from the real estate sector publicly sided with Lam, the Beijing-approved candidate who has been at the center of protesters’ ire.

How Hong Kong’s Sky-High Home Prices Feed the Unrest

4. How does this fuel the protests?

While the ultra-wealthy have built their fortunes on property and live in multimillion-dollar, multi-room houses, at the other end of the spectrum are the masses squeezed into apartments barely the size of parking spots. Some people resort to dwelling illegally in industrial buildings or converted shipping containers. Young people despair they’ll never be able to own their own home, hampering their chances of marriage and having a family. Some demonstrators, filled with the sense they have little to lose, are willing to resort to ever more extreme ways to protest at the expense of the economy. A property market crash? Yes, please. Even Lam herself has said the lack of housing for the young is an underlying issue that needs addressing to resolve the crisis.

5. How have the developers responded?

Some, including Sun Hung Kai Properties Ltd., Henderson Land Development Co. and New World Development Co., said they would provide plots of land to build apartments or so-called transitional housing for low-income families waiting to get into public housing. The real estate tycoons dismissed suggestions they were responding to government pressure, saying their motivation was philanthropic.

6. What’s the government doing?

Lam’s administration has been more proactive than previous ones in increasing the land supply for housing. It has proposed an $80 billion plan to build four artificial islands equal to about a fifth the size of Manhattan, which could house more than 1 million people but would take years to complete. Lam has also introduced more subsidized apartments, though the supply has come nowhere near to matching demand. In October, Lam relaxed mortgage rules for first-time home buyers so that they could qualify for more-expensive apartments with just a 10% down payment. The measure temporarily boosted home prices as demand increased.

How Hong Kong’s Sky-High Home Prices Feed the Unrest

7. So there’s no short-term fix?

Not really. And with the government’s authority being eroded by the months-long protests, it’s less likely to press ahead with controversial policies such as building the artificial islands. Nearly 6,000 people protested against the project in 2018, citing its cost and environmental impact. Adding to the general unhappiness is the theory outlined by some lawmakers that the government avoids taking land from developers and indigenous communities in the New Territories because it would be too politically damaging. Those groups are traditionally pro-government.

The Reference Shelf

  • Our Hong Kong Foundation’s research on land supply.
  • A QuickTake on the pro-democracy protests.
  • Liber Research Community’s report on land potential in the New Territories.
  • A study on housing supply options by a government-appointed task force.

To contact the reporter on this story: Shawna Kwan in Hong Kong at wkwan35@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Katrina Nicholas at knicholas2@bloomberg.net, Grant Clark, Paul Geitner

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