Hong Kong's Lee faces stern test over $3.4 billion bid to ease housing
shortage
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[February 10, 2023]
By Clare Jim
HONG KONG (Reuters) - A flagship $3.4 billion plan by Hong Kong to build
temporary housing to ease a massive shortage is facing fierce criticism
over its high cost and the absence of a longer-term solution in one of
the world's most unaffordable property markets.
The global financial hub has long struggled with sky-high house prices,
which have rocketed by 350% in the past two decades and created one of
the widest wealth gaps in the world, making accommodation a serious
social problem that Beijing is keen to see the city's leaders tackle.
Hong Kong Chief Executive John Lee, announcing his first major housing
initiative in his Policy Address last year, promised to build 30,000
units of "Light Public Housing" over five years, with the hope of
cutting the waiting time for public housing to 4-1/2 years from six
years.
But critics have slammed the HK$26.4 billion ($3.36 billion) price-tag,
noting that each unit costs about the same as permanent public housing
and say the scheme is merely a band-aid solution to a festering problem
that could potentially feed discontent.
The backlash over the project is a major challenge for Lee after Beijing
identified unaffordable housing as a key factor behind discontent,
especially among the city's youth, that led to sometimes violent
anti-government protests in 2019.
Further raising the stakes for Lee, Chinese President Xi Jinping last
year called for a "better life, a bigger flat" for the city's people,
many of whom live in cramped sub-divided flats and "cage" homes - wire
mesh hutches stacked on top of each other close to glistening office
skyscrapers.
"Wherever the location is there would be opposition voices," said Simon
Yau, professor of urban studies at Lingnan University of Hong Kong,
noting the criticism over the proposed locations of the houses, some of
which are in far away urban areas.
"But with this price tag, the government is using taxpayers' money to
experiment," Yau said.
Authorities last month announced eight locations for the homes that
would have a unit size of 140 to 330 square feet (13 to 31 square metres)
to accommodate families of one to five people.
The temporary houses, prefabricated units built using modular
construction methods, would be dismantled after around five years, when
the time for occupying the sites expires.
Yau said the scheme would do little to solve the housing shortage - a
problem that has dragged on for over two decades - because there are
currently 200,000 people living in subdivided flats and the homes are
not permanent.
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Secretary for Housing Winnie Ho Wing-yin
and Project Manager of the Architectural Services Department Edward
Wong pose for photos before a news conference to introduce the new
light public housing in Hong Kong, China January 30, 2023.
REUTERS/Tyrone Siu/File Photo
SMALLER THAN PARKING SPACE
A 2020 government report showed 1.65 million people, or 23.6% of the
total population of 7.5 million, were living in poverty. That
compares with the city's roughly 434,000 millionaires in 2021,
according to a Citibank survey.
Hong Kong is notorious for its number of subdivided flats, estimated
at 110,000 units at a median area of 124 square feet, smaller than a
parking space. Even though their condition is extremely poor, their
floor rent is 70% higher than overall floor rent in the city.
The government said the Light Public Housing would help tenants of
sub-divided flats, as the rent would be HK$780 to HK$2,650 per
month, significantly below the current median of HK$5,000 rent for
subdivided flats.
"Many people said Hong Kong is an international city, but its living
environment is not ideal," Eric Chan, the city's No.2 official, told
reporters this week.
"That's why the government is taking this step."
On Wednesday, the government scheme faced a grilling by lawmakers,
who however passed a HK$14.9 billion budget request for building the
first batch of homes.
The lawmakers said the project at Kai Tak in Kowloon, the most
controversial among the eight sites, would further pressure already
burdened facilities and transport networks in the area.
"With 30,000 people added to the area, the community facilities are
really insufficient," said Starry Lee, chairwoman of the Democratic
Alliance for the Betterment and Progress of Hong Kong (DAB).
Some residents of Kai Tak said they would consider organising
protests, which would pose a significant headache for the
government, and seeking a judicial review. They said the scheme ran
contrary to plans to build a second central business district (CBD)
in the area and could affect home prices.
"This is a matter of confidence in the government (planning)," said
Cheung King-fan, a district councillor of Kai Tak area.
"Is the government trying to achieve the task (of increasing public
housing) at any cost of public money?"
($1 = 7.8490 Hong Kong dollars)
(Reporting by Clare Jim; Editing by Anne Marie Roantree & Shri
Navaratnam)
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