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Thread: Housing affordability of key concern

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    Default Housing affordability of key concern

    http://www.straitstimes.com/PrimeNew...ry_634076.html

    Feb 12, 2011

    BUDGET PREVIEW SERIES

    Housing affordability of key concern

    This is the fifth of a special 10-part series in which The Straits Times explores some of the key issues expected to be tackled in the Budget on Feb 18. Property, utility rebates, bigger grants and higher income ceilings top list

    By Jessica Cheam, Housing Correspondent


    ASK Mr Chandra Mohan what he hopes for when the Budget is announced next week and he will tell you matter-of-factly: utility and rental rebates.

    The 65-year-old, who works in an events firm, lives in a three-room rental flat in Woodlands with his mother and sister, paying about $100 a month.

    Because his mother has had a stroke and requires 24-hour care, the siblings have faced financial difficulties in recent years. They had to sell their four-room HDB flat in Sembawang a few years ago.

    'If we can get some form of rental-flat or utility rebates, it would help us cope with rising costs,' he said.

    In the longer term, the family hopes to own a Housing Board flat again, maybe with the help of grants for needy families.

    Families like Mr Mohan's should be at the top of the priority list for measures in the upcoming Budget, said West Coast GRC MP Cedric Foo, who chairs the Government Parliamentary Committee for National Development.

    Any rebates would be of help and additional housing grants for needy families should be considered, including raising the income ceiling to qualify for them, he added.

    Those in the sandwich class are also hoping for measures to help them combat rising housing costs and living expenses. Take civil servant Charan Jaipragas, 26, for example. He recently bought a resale HDB maisonette in Taman Jurong for $495,000 with his fiancee.

    Even though they received a housing grant of $25,000 from the HDB, the purchase wiped out their savings. 'Any rebates will help us young households,' he said.

    Experts whom The Straits Times spoke to had differing views on whether measures in the Budget would address home buyers, owners or both. Most said the usual staples of property, utility and service and conservancy rebates could be announced.

    Some said the Budget could see larger housing grants, perhaps for the lower-income households, and flexibility on who qualifies for the grants.

    'The traditional remedies of upgrading of old estates, increasing the supply of HDB flats and sharpening the differential between Singaporeans and PRs (permanent residents) (in terms of benefits given) may again be applied,' said OCBC economist Selena Ling.

    KPMG Advisory tax partner Leonard Ong said: 'We hope to see the one-off 40 per cent property tax rebate given for owner-occupied residential properties in the 2009 Budget reinstated in the current Budget.'

    Ernst & Young tax services partner Choo Eng Chuan feels, however, that higher housing grants could further fuel the property boom. 'This could make prices rise further, making the situation worsen indirectly,' he said.

    Prices of HDB resale flats, which rose 14.1 per cent last year, have hit new records on the back of a recovering economy.

    Mr Choo feels that the growing income gap is also a big concern and traditional measures such as rebates for HDB dwellers would be more effective in addressing this divide.

    One thing that the Government could do is to perhaps raise the income ceiling to qualify for the Central Provident Fund housing grant, he said.

    The ceiling for each household is now $8,000 or $10,000, depending on the type of flat. 'As the economy grows, salaries do get higher, so this is something they could review,' suggested Mr Choo.

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    http://www.straitstimes.com/PrimeNew...ry_634078.html

    Feb 12, 2011

    Cost of living - hot topic in House on Monday

    By Cassandra Chew


    THE rising cost of living weighs heavy on the minds of MPs. At least four of them will be asking about education fee hikes, food prices in wet markets and subsidies for families when Parliament sits next Monday.

    The sitting falls four days before Budget Day on Friday, when several aid schemes for combating inflation are expected to be announced.

    Meanwhile, Mrs Josephine Teo (Bishan-Toa Payoh GRC) will ask Education Minister Ng Eng Hen to explain the reason for raising polytechnic fees for Singaporean students twice, last year and this year, according to the parliamentary Order Paper released yesterday.

    Mrs Teo, who chairs the Government Parliamentary Committee for Education, questioned the timing of the hike. She told The Straits Times yesterday: 'At this time when prices are generally rising, can we not hold back the increases?'

    Citing the widespread sentiment that things are getting more expensive, she argued that the cost of education, unlike cars, private homes or fresh produce, should not be subject to market forces of demand and supply.

    'I feel that with education, the prices are much more within our control. Maybe it's getting more expensive to run the schools, but it's something that we can look into, and maybe absorb the costs better,' she added.

    To help families cope better with rising costs, two MPs want Dr Vivian Balakrishnan, Minister for Community Development, Youth and Sports, to consider more subsidies.

    Mr Lim Biow Chuan (Marine Parade GRC) wants subsidies for parents who need help to pay for student care centres for their children, while labour MP Halimah Yacob (Jurong GRC) called for the income ceiling of two financial aid schemes to be raised from $1,800 to $2,500.

    These are the Centre-based Financial Assistance Scheme for Childcare, which subsidises childcare costs for needy families, and the Kindergarten Financial Assistance Scheme, which offers similar subsidies for families with children in kindergartens.

    Madam Ho Geok Choo (West Coast GRC) will ask Environment and Water Resources Minister Yaacob Ibrahim about measures to prevent hawkers from 'increasing their prices indiscriminately'.

    Recent headlining incidents will also come under scrutiny, like the death of a participant in weight-loss reality TV show Lose To Win, organised by the Health Promotion Board.

    Dr Lam Pin Min (Ang Mo Kio GRC) wants to know the cause of death of human resource executive Ong Joo Aun, 54, and if any other participants also experienced 'adverse consequences'.

    Dr Ong Seh Hong (Marine Parade GRC) wants to know if an employer is breaking any law when it penalises employees who are on sick leave during Chinese New Year.

    He did not identify any employer, but The Straits Times had reported that integrated resort Marina Bay Sands was planning to do it. It later changed its mind.

    Parliament will also debate three proposed laws: the Amusement Rides Safety Bill to tighten rules for amusement ride operators; the Private Lotteries Bill, which will introduce a new basis for computing private lottery duty; and the Legal Profession (Amendment) Bill to let foreign lawyers practise Singapore commercial law if they pass an exam.

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    There are the funniest named bills I have come across!

    "Parliament will also debate three proposed laws: the Amusement Rides Safety Bill to tighten rules for amusement ride operators; the Private Lotteries Bill, which will introduce a new basis for computing private lottery duty; and the Legal Profession (Amendment) Bill to let foreign lawyers practise Singapore commercial law if they pass an exam."
    Yee ha! Did I tickle your funny bone?


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