Home prices to increase 6.2% with GST

Farah Wahida20 Mar 2015

Property prices will likely increase by 6.2 percent once the goods and services tax (GST) is implemented on 1 April as certain building materials are taxed under the regime, said the Real Estate and Housing Developers’ Association Malaysia (Rehda).

“94 percent of the survey’s respondents are very worried over the GST’s impact on overall business costs,” said Rehda president Datuk Seri Fateh Iskandar Mohamed Mansor at the launch of its’ property industry survey results for 2H 2014, noting that GST is one of the key issues presently faced by the property sector.

Other equally important issues are financing for buyers and challenges involving the utility service providers as well as local authorities.

To illustrate how serious things are, Iskandar revealed that launches of commercial and residential properties for 2H 2014 fell 81.6 percent and 62.9 percent respectively from 1H 2014.

“Most distressing are first-time buyers wanting but (being) unable to purchase affordable housing.”

In fact, loan rejections over sales climbed seven percent from 2013 to 2014, said Iskandar.

Meanwhile, issues with utility service providers are on ensuring proper access to water, sewage and electricity for their new projects, he said.

Moreover, high development charges, inconsistent policies/guidelines, slow approval processes by local authorities such as town councils only compound matters.

“The government on a state and federal level ought to engage the private sector in addressing these issues effectively, in particular to increase the purchasing power of Malaysians,” urged Iskandar.
Farah Wahida, Editor of PropertyGuru, wrote this story. To contact her about this or other stories email farahwahida@propertyguru.com.my

 

 

GH Kok
Mar 26, 2015
GST has been implemented in 160 countries in the world, and almost all the other countries in ASEAN region. It's just a matter of time before it HAS to be implemented in Msia. Regarding property prices, even before GST, the prices are grossly inflated and totally unaffordable to the general public. Property developers are making a fat margin from sales of property. Banks were giving out loans generously to people who can't afford it. The banks in Msia are taking risks of massive lending while developers are making fat profits, until Bank Negara steps in to do the RIGHTFUL thing of controlling the lending and forcing demand to drop. So GST or no GST, the public expects developers to DROP their prices, not increase them. They have been making fat margins for too long.
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