Why is Hong Kong housing so expensive?

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  • čas přidán 25. 06. 2024
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    It is no secret that Hong Kong is one, if not the most, expensive places in the world to own a home. While property prices are now experiencing a cooling trend, buying a home remains an unattainable dream for most residents. But why is that, and what is the government doing to address the issue?
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Komentáře • 362

  • @Morisu-Chan
    @Morisu-Chan Před 5 měsíci +227

    Personally I put the entirety of the blame on the government for poor land management, just as the video stated, Hong Kong is actually far from a land shortage.

    • @azuremain
      @azuremain Před 4 měsíci +24

      It isn't poor land management. It's intentional gambling with it as leasing out land to developers is the main revenue of HK's government. If you want to change that, you will have to change the entire system.

    • @quoderatdemonstrandum7215
      @quoderatdemonstrandum7215 Před 4 měsíci +14

      Yes, but the blame should at least be shared between the British government (which allowed this problem to start off) and the HK governments post UK (since they did not undertake anything as they did not want to effect the status quo).

    • @M43782
      @M43782 Před 4 měsíci +2

      It feels like Hong Kong government play in being feudal master.

    • @antihypocrisy8978
      @antihypocrisy8978 Před 4 měsíci +7

      Tung Chee Wah tried to boost supply but market crashed and had to reverse. Tsang was too "friendly" with the property tycoons. Leung tried to increase supply, but Pan Democrats started to veto every policy that tried to boost supply in Legco. In turn, the opposition parties benefitted as more people became frustrated with property affordability.

    • @jamesu6241
      @jamesu6241 Před 4 měsíci +1

      @@antihypocrisy8978 Totally agree. Cheap private housing is also against the interests of many middle class families who already bought private residences, especially those who bought recently and are still serving their mortgages.

  • @YourWifeCallYou
    @YourWifeCallYou Před 5 měsíci +65

    Felt suffocated every time sees topic related to HK housing. Can't imagine the stress of HK people.

    • @lalatubby4836
      @lalatubby4836 Před 4 měsíci +6

      Are people in Hong Kong healthy?
      Because of its early health education, professional health services, and well-developed health care and medication system, Hongkongers enjoy a life expectancy of 88 for females and 83 for men, which is the highest in the world, and an infant mortality rate of 1.169 deaths per 1,000 births, the lowest in the world.

    • @Andrew-xw4zj
      @Andrew-xw4zj Před 4 měsíci +9

      @@lalatubby4836 and the lowest birthrate in the world partly because of unaffordable and cramped housing. So, they live long but no next generation, basically a city of geriatrics.

  • @AJ-rc5lr
    @AJ-rc5lr Před 4 měsíci +60

    If i am a citizen of HK and happen to have 1 million usd, instead of buying a house there, i would move out of HK and go to some emerging SEA countries and just living a life there like a king

    • @jonmartindeiii962
      @jonmartindeiii962 Před 4 měsíci +15

      now many koreans and japanese are doing exactly that, and our housing prices have also increased because of that. moving is just starting another problem for locals in that country.

    • @IamtheMan1111
      @IamtheMan1111 Před 4 měsíci

      Do you think government will allow that? I don't think so.

    • @coremaw
      @coremaw Před 2 měsíci

      ​@@IamtheMan1111thats true, probably accessing passport will be difficult.

    • @Paul-H-Wolfram6608
      @Paul-H-Wolfram6608 Před 29 dny

      Never go to Philippines or you will be scam by the Filipinos, especially those sweet looking young women that talk sweet things to your ears.

    • @noeminoemi1350
      @noeminoemi1350 Před 12 dny

      go to Canada.

  • @jstasiak2262
    @jstasiak2262 Před 5 měsíci +45

    This video was totally unserious for understanding the real reasons for Hong Kong’s housing problems.
    The reason Hong Kong has a housing problem is that the HK government relies far to heavily upon property taxes, instead of income or consumption taxes, to finance its operations. High property taxes translate into high rents. Property Tycoons conspire with the government to keep property prices artificially high, resulting in high rents and a reliable government revenue stream.
    Having low income taxes and no sales tax might be excellent for attracting business, but the HK government has to get its operating revenue from somewhere. If not from income or consumption taxes, then the revenue has to come from property taxes which are paid via rent revenue.
    Also, since the wealth of the Tycoons exists in the form of land and buildings, it is in their interests to keep property prices high by restricting the sale of land for housing.
    The MTR is another scam whereby the government sells undeveloped land to Tycoons at a relatively low price; these tycoons develop the property by adding the MTR and retail space thereby raising its value generating a profit stream, part of which is kicked back to the government in the form of property taxes paid for via users of the MTR and rent from tenants of the retail property.
    So, the HK housing problem is a totally manufactured problem whereby wealth is extracted from the working class via rents and transferred to the tycoons and the HK government.
    Singapore, a highly capitalist country, demonstrated how to develop an adequate supply of affordable housing for its citizens and still maintain a thriving business environment. It isn’t that difficult or complicated. But it does take political will. And it appears that the HK government and the property Tycoons lack that political will.

    • @flakgun153
      @flakgun153 Před 4 měsíci +2

      ok so instead of high rents you want people to pay high taxes which will deplete their income the same.

    • @jstasiak2262
      @jstasiak2262 Před 4 měsíci +3

      @@flakgun153
      Singapore is a high income country at a similar stage in development. If Singapore-a highly capitalist country-can figure out affordable housing, Hong Kong should be able to do likewise.
      The problem is not that Hong Kong can’t figure out affordable housing; the problem is that the property Tycoons and the government refuse to do what is required to solve this major problem.
      Again, if Singapore can do it, HK should be able to do it.

    • @offiz
      @offiz Před 4 měsíci +1

      @@jstasiak2262 HK has democracy and has regular elections ... BUT they seem not able to vote out a USELESS government at the ballot box. Democracy in HK is a SHAM, yet they are so proud of it. That's really SAD!

    • @onlydbrasko
      @onlydbrasko Před 4 měsíci

      Exactly. It's not "poor" land management but corruption.

    • @hpmc7426
      @hpmc7426 Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@offiz when you have an election in Hong Kong, the only difference in the candidates, is one wears glasses, or their favourite colors are different, or how they gel their hair. That's it. They have abso-freakin-lutely identical political and loyalty directions. No one ever thinks differently, if you do, you're in BIIIIIIIG trouble.

  • @davec8153
    @davec8153 Před 5 měsíci +57

    The issue with comparing HK with any other city, is that HK achieves the combination of no sales tax and a low income tax through revenue from land sales and its "partnership" with the MTR. All governments need to raise money through some means, and if the HK government is to lower revenue by means of property and land transactions, then it must be replaced with some other source of revenue (that is comparable). Anyone who doesn't address this issue has basically no understanding of how HK works.

    • @li_tsz_fung
      @li_tsz_fung Před 5 měsíci +1

      We can look at Singapore, and even the past of Hong Kong, the massive 85k housing project. We had a plan for diversified economy. It got ignored. If it's impossible, it wouldn't be like that in Singapore. 85k wouldn't pass.
      But of course, 85k got people suicide. People already bet too much on the property market. The plan was too aggressive. The problem get even worse.

    • @jstasiak2262
      @jstasiak2262 Před 5 měsíci

      Correct. This is thus far the most accurate statement regarding the real root of HK’s unaffordable housing problem.

    • @gonnabehappy
      @gonnabehappy Před 5 měsíci +2

      ​@@li_tsz_fungHK has not GST.

    • @offiz
      @offiz Před 4 měsíci

      HK always boasts about being the most FREE market and low taxes city in the world. But in reality, the common people in the streets pay super high INDIRECT TAX (via super high property prices) .... and they ended up living like SLAVES working for a 30 m2 apartment or pigeon hole in the sky. And to self console themselves, HKers claim to live in democracy island of HK, and pour scorn at mainland China for not having democracy and freedom. So who are the real modern day SLAVES? 🤣🤣🤣

    • @jeffy5120
      @jeffy5120 Před 4 měsíci

      ​@@li_tsz_fungSingapore needed to raise sales tax. If HK followed this route, it may affect tourist spending as it is cheaper than buying than Mainland. Hainan and Macau have zero tax on goods. We would lose out to them

  • @liangyu506
    @liangyu506 Před 5 měsíci +46

    It is the same issue as why San Francisco has high housing price..
    You "assume" people want to fix the high housing price issue, however, same as SF in reality the people that already owns a property will do anything to stop their assets price falling.
    If I remember correctly, early in 2000s there was a project of developing 85k/pa affordable housing program that was proposed by the HK government that was promptly shutdown by the residents.

    • @goldkwi
      @goldkwi Před 5 měsíci +2

      thing is, SF (and America in general) has large swathes of land. So not being able to control their property rates is a bigger f-up than what we experience in Singapore and Hong Kong now

    • @AbimaelLopez-hz3qq
      @AbimaelLopez-hz3qq Před 6 dny

      @@goldkwithere was a list about expensive cities and nyc was not on the list but Hong Kong was on the list

  • @anonymousman9824
    @anonymousman9824 Před 5 měsíci +59

    Hong Kong should start learning from Singapore’s public housing model. Public housing are literally everywhere besides in wealthy areas and there is not much affordability issue since 99% of the flats are below 1 million in price tag

    • @jefri4176
      @jefri4176 Před 5 měsíci

      Hk government don't care for it's citizen unlike Singapore government 😂😅

    • @btrue2day
      @btrue2day Před 5 měsíci +7

      I see it differently. In some ways the Sg Gov is trying to follow Hongkong, aiming to match Hongkong's population density. Its just a matter of time

    • @jefri4176
      @jefri4176 Před 5 měsíci +1

      @@btrue2day but SG government tried to control the price at least. Recently the tax for private condo increased especially for foreigner. Not sure if hk government did make any controlling changes all this while.

    • @anonymousman9824
      @anonymousman9824 Před 4 měsíci

      @@jefri4176 I would argue SG government has increased the foreigner tax by way too much. Those foreigners mainly buy very expensive 7 or 8 figures condominium in rich neighbourhoods, which has almost no impact on the 6 figures subsidised flats locals buy. As such, they have cooled the luxury market down which has little benefit to the average citizen

    • @jefri4176
      @jefri4176 Před 4 měsíci

      @@anonymousman9824 not really. Yes many foreigner buy those few million dollar SGD condo in SG which drive up the price because the local who want to upgrade to condo find it more expensive because they have to compete with foreigner,thus those middle income Singaporean ended up not upgrading to condo but competing to buy bigger hdb instead which drive up the price as well and it trickle down to smaller hdb(subsidized apartments). But the current situation in Singapore is also because of COVID and the current high loan interest rate from global market.
      Because of COVID,foreign worker who build those bto(build to order) hdb and condo can't enter Singapore and many projects were delayed causing many newlyweds who already ordered the bto hdb or newly unbuilt condo to change their plans and go for the available hdb/condo. Thus SG government have no choice but to increase the levy tax for foreigner in order to prioritize their citizen first.
      I am one of those "foreigner" who just bought a condo in SG recently in SG in 2021,just before SG government increase the tax Levy into crazy rates for foreigner 🤣😅

  • @MrKar18
    @MrKar18 Před 4 měsíci +7

    Singapore is on the verge of becoming like Hong Kong. But it's more of a reason of greed and treating it as only easy investment. But compared to that of HK, SG has better management and leaders to react faster on impacts.

    • @DreamWave69
      @DreamWave69 Před 7 dny

      SG has strict price control and no speculation etc, I can say SG do much well than HK. I believe is thanks to LKW Iron Fist Control.

  • @greaterbayareahero1401
    @greaterbayareahero1401 Před 4 měsíci +6

    It's actually pay back time for the Hong Kong Developers who has made a mint in the last 2-3 decades.TBH, you cannot consistently be winning as the expensive of the people on property prices. They have to expect the rough with the smooth. Even at $10K per sq feet it is still overpriced. It has dropped over 30% in the last year. Personally, it will go below $5000 per sq feet and get in line with the GBA as the area around it rises. The Government will push for the well being of the Greater Bay Area as the transportation gets better and better. It is predicted in the next 5 year the China GBA will attract the best talent in the world and create the next Silicon valley (covering all areas of booming business). Socially, housing will be more affordable. Watch this space.

  • @LoC28C
    @LoC28C Před 5 měsíci +19

    What the Hong Kong Government need to do is to have a law that states if a developer has tendered this land it must develop this piece of land within 5 years. If this doesn’t happen then they must do a joint venture with the Government to develop this land failing which this land will be forfeited by the Government.
    This is easier said than done as the Opposition will never agree to this because they are handled by the rich land and development tycoons. They are also the people who have control over those house owners in Hong Kong who will also go against this as well. The reason that these house owners will go against having affordable housing is that this move will reduce their value of their houses in Hong Kong. Therefore the only way out for Hong Kong is to have the political will to have a hard handed approach to land management, which Hong Kong people cannot accept.

    • @anonymousman9824
      @anonymousman9824 Před 5 měsíci +2

      that is what they do here in Singapore, developers need to pay a 35% tax when buying land, if they do not complete and sell the project within 5+ years, they will not get the tax back, if they do, they get most of the tax back

    • @ruslankolotogin
      @ruslankolotogin Před 5 měsíci +1

      Most of the land in New territories those 10 000 acres they talk about where sold before 1997, when hk was governed by Brits, hk chinese government overtook the problem, which was created way before.

    • @poshbo
      @poshbo Před 5 měsíci +4

      That would make the land much riskier and less valuable so tender prices will drop, meaning government revenue will drop. The overall issue is that the HK government relies excessively on property related revenue so it always has an incentive to keep prices high. The SG government doesn't rely so much on property revenue so it doesn't have the same incentive. Around one third of SG government revenue comes from VAT, that's partially why buying goods in SG is more expensive than in HK. But it would be very difficult to introduce a VAT in HK, not least due to people shopping in Shenzhen or ordering online via JD or Taobao. Maybe raising the maximum salary tax in HK from 15% to say 20% (still lower than in SG) would help the government lean off property related revenue, though high income earners would no doubt oppose this.

    • @davec8153
      @davec8153 Před 5 měsíci +2

      @@poshbo The only post that recognizes the root of the problem. The issue with comparing HK with any other city, is that HK achieves the combination of no sales tax and a low income tax through revenue from land sales and its "partnership" with the MTR. All governments need to raise money through some means, and if the HK government is to lower revenue by means of property and land transactions, then it must be replaced with some other source of revenue (that is comparable). Anyone who doesn't address this issue has basically no understanding of how HK works.

    • @poshbo
      @poshbo Před 5 měsíci +3

      @@davec8153 agreed. The way that the HK government spreads the burden of collecting revenue hurts the poor and lower to average income earners too much. This creates a massive gap between rich and poor and leads to mass social discontent, as well as ridiculously small apartments. So the burden must be tweaked so that the rich and high income earners bear more of the burden, and this absolutely can be done without damaging overall competitiveness. The fact that Singapore can be so competitive while providing subsidised housing to 80% of its population is proof of that. But trying to dramatically change the decades old status quo in HK will be extremely difficult.

  • @jamesu6241
    @jamesu6241 Před 4 měsíci +9

    There are many vested interests who are against affordable house prices. They are not confined to the government, property developers and their stooges in the form of media columnists, so called experts and environmental pressure groups. The vested interests include a large segment of property owning middle class whose wealth mostly consist of their tiny flats. Those who are still paying mortgages risk becoming negative equity if house price crashes due to abundance of supply.

    • @Andrew-xw4zj
      @Andrew-xw4zj Před 4 měsíci +2

      Agreed but regardless of what they want the crash is coming anyways. China is entering a long period of sustained property price deflation similar to what happened in Japan in the 90s. This will inevitably seep over the border and cause significant price declines in HK. In fact, it's already started happening, HK property prices have declined over the past few years and land has been taken off the auction block because of lack of interest from developers, something that would have been unthinkable 5 years ago. The HK government has a serious problem because of the overreliance on land sales for financing as others have detailed.

  • @worldlife9834
    @worldlife9834 Před 5 měsíci +16

    Hong Kong is a nightmare city. Racism, discrimination and anti family environment make Hong Kong an unlivable city. Imagine working 6 days a week and only 1 week paid vacation per year.

    • @PoliticalWeekly
      @PoliticalWeekly Před 5 měsíci +1

      Racism against whom? The city is 94% Chinese.

    • @canto_v12
      @canto_v12 Před 5 měsíci +2

      6 day work week is uncommon now. It was common in the 90s.

    • @worldlife9834
      @worldlife9834 Před 5 měsíci +3

      You are from a different planet@@canto_v12

    • @vble2337
      @vble2337 Před 4 měsíci

      you are talking about Canada right?

    • @worldlife9834
      @worldlife9834 Před 4 měsíci +1

      Nah, Racist Chinese Hong Kong@@vble2337

  • @heyojayo8642
    @heyojayo8642 Před 5 měsíci +25

    No one has mentioned the shady backroom deals the government has with the MTR corporation.
    Everyone in HK knows who the MTR corporation is. The lines running throughout the city are ubiquitous and its surrounding lands has a clause where the land around the lines is the MTR's to use/sell.
    So obviously building metro lines is expensive af so the MTR corporation recoup that cost by charging bucketloads for housing on their land given to them by the HK government.

    • @thegoat6147
      @thegoat6147 Před 5 měsíci +8

      Do you realize HK govt owned 75% of the MTR?
      It's arguably the most successful private public partnership in the world.
      One of very few public transit systems that's profitable by a healthy margin and provides the best subway system (better than Japan IMO).
      They developed mostly shopping malls with the land near MTR stations which is great convenience and value to the public as well as bringing in revenue to the gov't via shareholder's dividends.

    • @serriajohn
      @serriajohn Před 4 měsíci

      MTR is a HK government owned corp, therefore guarantee the maintainence and citizen welfare. If HK has more public hospitals, the medicare could be more affortable. public transportation and health care system shall be state-owned, and never be privatized.

    • @Andrew-xw4zj
      @Andrew-xw4zj Před 4 měsíci

      @@thegoat6147 MTR's rail system is not profitable, it only manages to make a profit through the real estate and commercial property developments attached to the rail system. That's why all of the MTR's overseas operations are unprofitable, those countries prohibited them from building or owning unaffordable 'luxury' flats and malls above stations.

    • @jameslim3850
      @jameslim3850 Před 4 měsíci

      Singapore is also on the verge of overtaking Hong Kong for being the MOST expensive public housing (leasehold) in the world. Some say the government is so rich but the ordinary person have to spend so much for a small pigeon hole flat.

    • @serriajohn
      @serriajohn Před 4 měsíci

      @@jameslim3850 USA has inflation, HK and Singapore finance are deeply connected with US market, and both choose to have inflation policy. Inflation economy has clear evidence ---- housing price is increasing very quickly , because USA printed too much money and house is a key asset to resist inflation.

  • @user-gu8qi4me8x
    @user-gu8qi4me8x Před 5 měsíci +1

    This video is actually genuinely underated and damm

  • @8Xrealestate
    @8Xrealestate Před 5 měsíci +1

    Great content for a 2024 refresh of this topic

  • @jz5748
    @jz5748 Před 5 měsíci +12

    or you could say property developers are restricting the supply of house and land

    • @azuremain
      @azuremain Před 4 měsíci +2

      Developers are not to blame. They just do what they are supposed to do as a private company, i.e. maximizing profit, the very principle of any private company. It is the government that has been gambling with property prices at the expense of HK's residents.

    • @antihypocrisy8978
      @antihypocrisy8978 Před 4 měsíci

      The Pan Democrats vetoed attempts to boost land supply during Leung and Lam administrations.

  • @wc4109
    @wc4109 Před 5 měsíci +23

    HK’s financing model is fundamentally flawed… HK government collects very little taxes, so their only real source of revenue is from land sales… Why home prices in HK are the highest… on Earth! Like most other developed countries, HK government needs to start collecting more taxes!

    • @Lambyyy
      @Lambyyy Před 5 měsíci +3

      Low corporation/income tax is a source of competitive advantage though, with raised taxes matching other countries, what competitive advantage does HK have?

    • @poshbo
      @poshbo Před 5 měsíci +2

      @@Lambyyy there are definitely taxes which can be raised without hurting competitiveness. For example, the maximum salary tax can go from 15% to 20%, which is still lower than SG's maximum rate of 22% and much lower than global averages. Maybe a small tax of around 15% on imported wine and champagne, or raising the tax on tobacco. And stop wasting cash on the Lantau land reclamation. There are definitely things which can be done, it just takes political will.

    • @BranVan10k
      @BranVan10k Před 5 měsíci

      no

  • @jamesfung3347
    @jamesfung3347 Před 5 měsíci +13

    Real estate is king and the de facto currency of Hong Kong, it is the best all- weather investment for 70 years. Without expensive real estate, it will not be today’s HK ..

  • @Youcanttouchmyhandle
    @Youcanttouchmyhandle Před 5 měsíci +2

    12:34 how many units are empty that are being held?

  • @Tom-sg4iv
    @Tom-sg4iv Před 4 měsíci +1

    Hong Kong is/was a lovely place. Would love to live there, but the housing prices are just crazy.

  • @DonLee1980
    @DonLee1980 Před 4 měsíci +1

    property values have lost an average of nearly 20% since 2 years ago. I knew this would happen. You can't sustain that kind of prices when you have over 100,000 high income expats and residents leaving the city.

  • @nicholasfooong.
    @nicholasfooong. Před 5 měsíci +27

    HK became a financial ruin 😢

  • @BigBenLB
    @BigBenLB Před 4 měsíci

    There is almost nothing mentioned here about interest rates which the HK government doesn't actually control. The HKD is pegged to the USD so they have to follow the US set interest rate in order to maintain that. The high in 2021 occurred when US interest rates were almost zero making it very cheap to borrow. Immediately afterwards in early 2022 interest rates started to rise which naturally had a cooling effect on the property market. So even if they wanted to cool the market directly (and I don't believe they do when they get a huge amount of their revenue from land sales) their ability to do so is pretty limited compared with other countries

  • @corediagram8016
    @corediagram8016 Před 5 měsíci +5

    This is just an opinion. There is a very simple solution to this problem. There is no need for "property developers". Property developers can convert without much trouble into construction companies that cater to each citizen as a customer. The Government can tax appropriately to each house owner. The more nodes a trade has between actual seller and actual buyer, the more money will be required. This also gives citizens an option to choose which construction company builds for them for the best deal. If there are 20 citizens in need of houses, 20 floors can be built when needed instead for a 40-50 already built empty apartment awaiting tenants. This is just greed.

    • @azuremain
      @azuremain Před 4 měsíci +1

      That's true, each party involved wants to make a buck which is understandable. But the ultimate problem is the high dependency of the HK government on land sales revenue. That is why all measures are merely like a band aid. The government is like a drug addict, it has to gamble with the property prices and it needs to keep them high. The whole system is flawed from the get go.

    • @corediagram8016
      @corediagram8016 Před 4 měsíci

      D talk. Alright. :)@@azuremain

  • @Youcanttouchmyhandle
    @Youcanttouchmyhandle Před 5 měsíci

    Thank you

  • @Youcanttouchmyhandle
    @Youcanttouchmyhandle Před 5 měsíci +2

    4:22 planning is important protecting environmental areas and waterways
    Greening cities and restoring vegetation

  • @bernardkoh1650
    @bernardkoh1650 Před 4 měsíci

    Same prob in Singapore.. 😢😢

  • @dxelson
    @dxelson Před 5 měsíci +2

    50 year leases?? It should be 25 like in Macau

  • @leeandrew2682
    @leeandrew2682 Před 5 měsíci +17

    too many millionaires and billionaires on that tiny patch of land

  • @serriajohn
    @serriajohn Před 4 měsíci

    the reasonable price is to be 2 K to 4K HK dollars per sqaure feet. house bubble will eventually break out.

  • @DreamWave69
    @DreamWave69 Před 7 dny

    For forty years, the same problem has yet to be solved.

  • @deniselee1900
    @deniselee1900 Před 5 měsíci +5

    Definitely a self-inflicted wound based on ideological laissez faire believes... One of the interviewee mentions HK has no money, HK has earns its own taxation, let's bring up the inevitable comparision, HK lost the plot, how is it Singapore could do it, and HK not do it better?

    • @archiehickox6518
      @archiehickox6518 Před 4 měsíci

      How old is Singapore? How old is Hong Kong?

    • @deniselee1900
      @deniselee1900 Před 4 měsíci +1

      @@archiehickox6518what? like 3.5billion years? c'mon , both are land scarce but who owns the majority of land (ans: govt), whom both attempted land recliamation (Singapore had to import sand no less), yet the policies of HK govt, create housing crisis where people lives in cages! Only benefit of the high housing cost may be to those whom chooses to leave!

  • @kerri648
    @kerri648 Před 5 měsíci

    its basically like every other big city ...lots of people, buildings owned by investors

  • @marktn9851
    @marktn9851 Před 4 měsíci +2

    It all started 30 years before handover. The west, esp brits, had to inflate asset prices to capitalise some assets pre-1997 n to make it too expensive to be bought over in order to preserve some control or to continue milking HK.

  • @jelanimasego8656
    @jelanimasego8656 Před 4 měsíci

    wonder what’s the occupancy rates

  • @Frenchieeeee
    @Frenchieeeee Před měsícem

    $1.2m for a small closet is a joke.

  • @felipeo8768
    @felipeo8768 Před 4 měsíci +3

    Government releases land to only a few parties (the 'chosen' property developers). Developers deal with investors (mostly $ launderers from north of HK). These investors then flip the units on the market. HK is still the easiest way to get your money out of the country from the north (a country that shall not be named, but it starts with C and ends with Hina). A big part of the problem.

    • @jeffy5120
      @jeffy5120 Před 4 měsíci

      HK lands are auctioned. Given how expensive it is, only realistically the existing giants could afford it. A few years ago, there were mainland competitors but now they're struggling with debt

  • @starrynight6268
    @starrynight6268 Před 2 měsíci

    Few years ago, I remember watching a news that a Chinese official visited HK and promised that people won’t be living in tin box houses anymore when the 50 years leases is over. I don’t know what will happen in the future, but I’ll grasp any signs of hope which could help and prevent any families in HK from a life of destitution. And I hope the Chinese gov can convey some solution that could only be operated under their system …

  • @whitefang924
    @whitefang924 Před 5 měsíci +11

    2:20 For that price i could buy a two story terrace house with 4 Bedrooms buy two Mercedes for cash and and put the rest of the cash in a trust fund and live life jobless.

  • @Youtuber_YusukeFromGermany
    @Youtuber_YusukeFromGermany Před 3 měsíci

    Not to forget that up until the recent years Hong Kong did not have a retirement plan for elder people.

  • @rontheoracle
    @rontheoracle Před 5 měsíci +1

    How many years have this been going on?
    +/- more than a decade?
    Have this video about HK's housing prices and many many other videos about HK's housing prices lower the prices of houses in HK?

  • @j.c.4192
    @j.c.4192 Před 5 měsíci +1

    Sounds very much like NYC and San Francisco

  • @attentioncestpaslegal7847
    @attentioncestpaslegal7847 Před 4 měsíci

    Those prices are not so high considering that's how the government gets funding.
    Remember people, income tax is very low and there is no VAT.

  • @kageyamareijikun
    @kageyamareijikun Před 4 měsíci

    50-year leases? Please tell me at that price HKers are not paying for just 50-year leaseholds. Are residential properties in HK freehold, 99-year leaseholds or 50-year leaseholds? At that average price of US$1.2mil.

  • @chrthewrestler2301
    @chrthewrestler2301 Před 4 měsíci

    all the big cities are very expensive.

  • @Youcanttouchmyhandle
    @Youcanttouchmyhandle Před 5 měsíci

    Price capping
    #financialabuse
    #dutyofcare

  • @baph0met
    @baph0met Před 5 měsíci +12

    That's what happens when you grant all the land to a single player, in this case the government, the government has a monopoly on housing in Hong Kong, of course it will be outstandingly expensive, all monopolies are.

    • @Callsign-Blade_RunnerSG
      @Callsign-Blade_RunnerSG Před 5 měsíci +4

      Nope, the issue isn’t about the Goverment owning all the Land. It’s about knowing your piorities as a Goverment towards satisfiying the affordable Housing NEEDS of your OWN citizens FIRST. By Selling MORE Land to private PROFIT DRIVEN property developers, the prices will skyrocket leading to ONLY the Richest of the Rich could afford them…

    • @corediagram8016
      @corediagram8016 Před 5 měsíci

      There is a solution. Directly sell to citizens. There is no need for "property developers". Property developers can convert into construction companies that caters to each citizen as a customer. If everyone is profit driven, the weakest link will suffer.@@Callsign-Blade_RunnerSG

  • @starfish253
    @starfish253 Před 4 měsíci

    Basically, the government has to sell land at high prices, since its income from taxes is very low. HK population can choose - higher taxes or high property prices?

  • @virolee3776
    @virolee3776 Před 5 měsíci +7

    This is intentionally done to make the rich ( landlords) richer, and the poor continue to pay High taxes in land premiums. HK needs a huge supply of working / renting poor to serve the rich. By making property unaffordable- the poor are forced to work.

    • @antihypocrisy8978
      @antihypocrisy8978 Před 4 měsíci +1

      So people in countries with cheaper housing don't need to work? Not sure if I get your point.

  • @persianguy2849
    @persianguy2849 Před 4 měsíci +1

    None of what was said here in the video or the comments are the real cause of housing crisis. There are enough houses and land for everyone in Hong Kong or any other city in the world. What caused the housing crisis across the world and will cause further crisis is that housing is available to purchase by everyone, specially housing investors. They are the one that pay more and buy homes that could be bought by one who wants to occupy those homes. Investors buy many homes and in some cases leave the home empty.
    A person who wants to buy a home and move in will have to compete with numerous home investors who are rich and pay more and will eventually buy that home. They raise the demand for homes 2 or 3 times. The solution is to stop home investing. One person, one home. Then there will be no stress on housing market.

  • @iFukuyama
    @iFukuyama Před 4 měsíci

    1000 square feet is 93m²

  • @iloveindiandfood557
    @iloveindiandfood557 Před 5 měsíci

    it hasnt grow now it hasnt drop for the home in hk for me

  • @ezioauditore5616
    @ezioauditore5616 Před 5 měsíci +1

    33mt2 for 1.2m usd
    and theres nothing special in hk

  • @languist
    @languist Před 5 měsíci +6

    Plot twist, I’m actually in Hong Kong travelling as a tourist, and I can confirm that it wasn’t exactly easy to find cheap accommodation either :P

  • @ezezcompany
    @ezezcompany Před 4 měsíci

    When big money takes over the city… both the people and the government suffer in a way or another…

  • @dennisc-db7en
    @dennisc-db7en Před 4 měsíci

    goverment is smart in the sense that more than 50% own private appartment. these 50% support high housing price.

  • @lumunecg
    @lumunecg Před 4 měsíci

    Not matter how modern a country is, it cannot provide the basic need of an affordable shelter , its time to pack and leave this country.

  • @chualcvn9832
    @chualcvn9832 Před 5 měsíci

    No proper planning
    Family should buy house with one bedroom one living hall. Then upgrade to larger house

  • @sensaznal
    @sensaznal Před 2 měsíci

    Move aside HK , Sydney is on the way to becoming the most unaffordable property prices in the world.

  • @YesCivic-R
    @YesCivic-R Před 4 měsíci

    The inhertied taxing structure designed to cuase RE property to value pop up artificially with tax revenue keepin going up in mind, the higher the better at a cost of consumer/household spending and financial pressure. Goverment, top average wealthy, property developer are the beneficiary, as long as the economy keep rolling, and the top wealthy companies keep reinvesting to sustain the overall growth, but that doesn't pan out because top wealthy will trim cost and improve magine to be sustainable, thus this taxing model does not work, but for serveral decades people are not addressing this issue critically. The taxing structure does'nt work just by taxing RE property alone (scam/short cut econimic planning), it needs many sources of taxing revenue like any other major developed counties. Who to blam,? Partially the people is not vocal about it.

  • @cktan2739
    @cktan2739 Před 4 měsíci

    I'm a Singaporean who complains the government is not doing enough for citizens. But I am grateful to the government for making public housing affordable and available to Singapore citizens.

  • @abbe1abbe156
    @abbe1abbe156 Před měsícem

    Poor government. The government is horrendous. Having citizens live in squalor is not okay.

  • @taro7145
    @taro7145 Před 4 měsíci

    To sum up, the reason it is so expensive is because the government wants to fetch a high price for every single piece of land it sold.

  • @babibrain
    @babibrain Před 4 měsíci

    Hong Kong citizens should look beyond their borders to own property, as Hong Kong real estate is unattainable for most. To live better, Hong Kongers need to think outside the box. If they desire a city like Hong Kong, Singapore is the best option. For a beach-like lifestyle, Thailand offers an ideal choice. For a slower and more laid-back pace, Malaysia is a suitable option. Instead of considering migration to Canada, the UK or US would be better choices if Western countries are being considered.

  • @kingk5013
    @kingk5013 Před 5 měsíci +3

    lol we lease it in london for the same price at least they own it

  • @Adam-fy4wc
    @Adam-fy4wc Před 4 měsíci

    我当年居住柴湾杏花村。2002年房屋价格触底。好像二十五万美元。房租八千五。离开以后却飙升。那个年代经济不景气。但是还没有大陆人进市场购房。今天是什么情况了呢?感觉经济不景气,但是比当年情况好些了吧。不同的是有大陆人支撑。但是今天还有政治因素。那个年代似乎没有。那个年代好像情况更稳定。今天高薪人士移民。市场大概平衡了各方面因素后集体定价。但是给予的定价会不会太高了一点。我的感觉是肯定的,即便自己看好当地前景。我以为这几年的展望明显逊色。放假应该反应了。却似乎没有。不过,我的假设不一定正确。我以为价格尚未从比较高的地位下滑。是不是?这个有些不寻常。为什么当年发现价格下滑。今天则不了呢?也许已经下滑了百分之五至十。那样的跌幅不够。因为之前升值了太多。或许我说的不对。就是根据大陆第一线城市的借鉴(?),香港不大跌也合理合情。因为在大陆第一线不降落。只有调节。第三线城市却实现大下滑。还是香港得到人们的肯定。我只是说,相对原先的地方氛围,今日的低迷情绪应该有相应的价格调整。其实,调低有积极作用。使青年买房能力提高,对接下来的市场正常运作有可好的面向。维持过高的水平反而产生不稳定。因为实际情况与人们的期待存在脱钩。有的人可能想干脆放盘房屋,移民。还是大陆人的价格支持妨碍市场的妥善调整了吧。目前价格比较稳定。不知道会不会有什么催化剂促进变化。拭目以待。

  • @Indians_Love_China_Chang
    @Indians_Love_China_Chang Před 5 měsíci +4

    Your article was thoroughly enjoyable! Your writing is both clear and succinct, and you have a remarkable ability to elucidate complex concepts in an easily digestible manner. Your practice of presenting both sides of the argument and urging readers to form their own opinions is truly praiseworthy. I'm eagerly anticipating more articles from you in the future!

  • @raymondlee9491
    @raymondlee9491 Před 4 měsíci

    Demand and supply... Capitalistic economic system

  • @Johannesai1
    @Johannesai1 Před 5 měsíci

    12:09 what's the meaning of KPI ?

    • @canto_v12
      @canto_v12 Před 5 měsíci +1

      Key Performance Indicator, basically a fancy term for a standardised metric.

    • @Johannesai1
      @Johannesai1 Před 4 měsíci

      thanks! ​@@canto_v12

  • @hsiu4425
    @hsiu4425 Před 4 měsíci

    should be "Why is Hong Kong housing STILL so expensive?"

  • @misterbig9025
    @misterbig9025 Před 5 měsíci +6

    Do Hong Kongers want to move elsewhere when they find property prices too high?

    • @canto_v12
      @canto_v12 Před 5 měsíci

      No because of the closed border making commuting every day very time consuming.

  • @elfacisco
    @elfacisco Před 5 měsíci +2

    it's goverment problem, blame it.

  • @wowokingxoxo
    @wowokingxoxo Před 5 měsíci

    Just don't go.

  • @KC-io2rg
    @KC-io2rg Před 4 měsíci

    This is a government created scarcity problem pure and simple. Similar to why diamonds are so expensive because DeBeers bought up all the diamonds. The government gets to create free money by squeezing the home buyers and make owning a home impossible for most HK residents in the process. The scarcity also allow the developers to generate huge markups and path of the profits are then funnel to politician to maintain the status quo. I really feel bad for these people.

  • @gw3528
    @gw3528 Před 3 měsíci

    Theres always a conspiracy theory that they want to maintain the high land prices …

  • @Trumppower
    @Trumppower Před 5 měsíci +4

    Ask Li-Ka-Shing who owns a lot of HK.

  • @annabellemitchell192
    @annabellemitchell192 Před 4 měsíci +1

    You know the housing crisis in Melbourne had gotten bad when I just moved to hk and am finding it to be comparatively reasonably priced…

  • @alpinismutilitar3886
    @alpinismutilitar3886 Před 4 měsíci

    Honh Kong Real Housing Bubble just busted... Housing Market is in Busted mode.... in real price.

  • @kedsau
    @kedsau Před 3 měsíci

    Why does their chinese sound very different from those in China?

  • @Sjalabais
    @Sjalabais Před 4 měsíci

    This report has a narrow scope on the housing market - and that one alone. Isn't it imaginable that a 45% drop in transactions and a 20% drop in prices over two years coincides with HK losing its freedoms? Who wants to live in an authoritarian city like that? There could be longterm trends here that your report isn't even touching on.

  • @lile5341
    @lile5341 Před 5 měsíci +3

    Singapore managed to get income from the accumulated wealth in its SWF for the past 50 years, thats why it can afford not to over-monetise land and burden the people. Its all about its revenue model. Should Singapore does not have its Reserve in SWF, it might need to squeeze more income from land. Management and vision is key.

  • @Hkchinese888
    @Hkchinese888 Před 5 měsíci +4

    10% of our HKers live in cubicle rooms.

  • @rgen28
    @rgen28 Před 5 měsíci +1

    The problem is the same tax rate for everyone.

  • @superacumen
    @superacumen Před 5 měsíci

    ما فائدة الحياة اذا كنا سنجري لناكل ونشرب ليل نهار ليل نهار . الحياة حب ووئام مع الاهل ، صفاء الروح ، مساعدة الناس والعطف عليهم . عن نفسي لا ارى ان العيش في هذه المدن الكبرى لها فائدة غير الازمات النفسية التي يعيشها الانسان في هذه المنازل

  • @mrking3289
    @mrking3289 Před 4 měsíci +1

    Buy home in the UK

  • @ReynatoSantillan-po8pw
    @ReynatoSantillan-po8pw Před 4 měsíci

    supply and demand

  • @raymondcaylor6292
    @raymondcaylor6292 Před 4 měsíci

    5:14 " upholds the free market philosophy " absolutely nothing about not owning the land itself but only leasing it for 50 year's (70 in earlier transactions) upholds " free market " actuality and it's silly to even entertain that it ever could.

  • @MarianaSantos1974
    @MarianaSantos1974 Před 4 měsíci

    I trust that soon our leaders will understand that a home is a human right and act accordingly 🙏🏻

    • @shauncameron8390
      @shauncameron8390 Před 4 měsíci

      A home is not a human right. No one is owed or obligated to provide such.

  • @stephengneri2136
    @stephengneri2136 Před 4 měsíci

    or a clear demonstration on greed.

  • @Okahui
    @Okahui Před 5 měsíci +1

    basically a land ponzi.

  • @jiaweike3518
    @jiaweike3518 Před 4 měsíci

    People from Hong Kong should consider immigration. It is so crowded in Hong Kong. Like they can even consider moving into China where there is more land and space for families.

    • @shauncameron8390
      @shauncameron8390 Před 4 měsíci

      They have no desire to live under CCP and Xi's rule.

  • @bogus7179
    @bogus7179 Před 5 měsíci +1

    See how big ck, new world devt, shk, Wheelock etc...r

  • @nguyentt4079
    @nguyentt4079 Před 4 měsíci

    Maybe the problem isn't that hard to solve.. just inept policy makers

  • @speedbirdconcorde001
    @speedbirdconcorde001 Před 4 měsíci

    Maybe build housing on 10% or fringe areas of the massive country parks. Housing is THE paramount issue in HK, don't tell me about "environment" when people are homeless or living in coffins

  • @sarcasmo57
    @sarcasmo57 Před 4 měsíci

    Just build more homes and infrastructure.

  • @trueseeker262
    @trueseeker262 Před 2 měsíci

    Its the deBeers system control demand and supply.

  • @petebngyn
    @petebngyn Před 4 měsíci

    Singapore builds more affordable housing for its citizens.

  • @dougmarshall5324
    @dougmarshall5324 Před 4 měsíci

    The history of HK expensive housing is blamed on the British occupation they wanted as much out of HK as possible .... saying that when the handover in 97 the government had an opportunity to change that greed they decided to continue because it lined their pockets and its still corrupt today because of lack of change ...... I was strongly against the protest in 2019 i lost my business however they should have focused on the control of rental and property a protest that would have meant something had a focus ..... You mention land sold to developers well HK people know thats all under the table .... HK can & will survive if the corruption stops.

  • @emmapeel8163
    @emmapeel8163 Před 4 měsíci

    Slow news day?
    HK has been an expensive destination for decades

  • @heytruthdohurts
    @heytruthdohurts Před 5 měsíci +3

    since when HK housing market is not the world most unaffordable

    • @poshbo
      @poshbo Před 5 měsíci

      Between the 1997 Asian Financial Crisis and the SARS epidemic in 2003, HK property prices actually crashed. I used to rent a 2 bedroom apartment in Sheung Wan, the building was completed in 2003 and my landlord paid just HKD 1.3 million. It's worth around HKD 8 million now though it peaked at around HKD 9 million in 2019. So yes, between 1997 and 2003, HK property was actually quite affordable, though very few people predicted that prices would skyrocket again so few people bought property at the low prices.
      Incidentally, the property crash is also partially why Tung Chee-Hwa's 1997 plan to build 85,000 public housing units was killed off. Government revenue plunged while home owners feared that the flood of new housing supply would further lower the value of their homes.