Land-starved Hong Kong plans to build more affordable housing in response to public demands that have fueled social unrest.
Chief Executive Carrie Lam announced a major development project yesterday for Hong Kong’s border area with mainland China in the last annual policy address of her current term.
The “Northern Metropolis” plan aims to provide hundreds of thousands more homes and tens of thousands of jobs. It fits in with broader plans for closer ties across the border with mainland China.
Lam’s administration is under pressure to ease a shortage of affordable homes that makes it difficult for some of Asia’s best educated and most cosmopolitan citizens to find housing.
Public housing estates have not kept up with demand, and Hong Kong’s property is among priciest in the world: it tied Zurich and Paris last year as the most expensive city in a survey by the World Economic Forum.
Astronomical prices helped drive months of anti-government protests in 2019 that have prompted a major security crackdown by the central government in Beijing.
In her address, Lam repeatedly defended Hong Kong’s National Security Law, imposed by Beijing last year, along with changes to the election system that reduce the number of members of the local legislature elected by universal suffrage and establish a strict vetting system to screen out candidates considered insufficiently patriotic.
Such measures led the U.S. to impose sanctions on Hong Kong and Chinese officials.
Hong Kong is mostly perched on mountains and islands and it has more than 90,000 people per square mile in its urban core. Much of its 1,100 square kilometers of wild space has not been developed.
Critics say the government restricted the amount of land available for housing after the 1980s to help drive prices higher, providing a windfall for developers but pushing home ownership out of the reach of the average family.
The average household has 15 square meters of living space per person, according to the territory’s Census and Statistics Department. Most of the territory’s 7.4 million people live in high-rise, government-owned apartment buildings.
Buying one of Hong Kong’s cramped apartments costs an average of $28,570 per square meter, 2 1/2 times the price in mainland China and 1 1/2 times Japan’s level, according to a survey by Global Property Guide.
While living costs are high and rising, Hong Kong’s median income has fallen by about 6% since last year, according to the statistics department. MDT/AP
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