The Phnom Penh Post

S Korea further hikes tax rate for multiple homes

- Bae Hyun-jung

THE South Korean government last week announced it would again raise the comprehens­ive real estate tax rate for owners of high-priced residences and of multiple properties, as part of a further attempt to rein in rocketing housing prices.

According to the latest action plan, those who own multiple properties in bubble-prone zones will face real estate taxes as high as 3.2 per cent, officials said. This additional tax hike comes on the heels of a government decision in July to increase real estate taxes to a maximum of 2.5 per cent.

“The real estate market has recently been overheatin­g, especially in Seoul and the metropolit­an area,” said Deputy Prime Minister and Finance Minister Kim Dong-yeon.

“Such a price bubble, combined with burgeoning market anxiety, has paralysed the normal function of the residentia­l real estate market.”

The government’s announceme­nt centered mainly on the reinforcem­ent of the comprehens­ive real estate tax regulation­s, under which high-end buyers will face higher taxes and an expanded range of homeowners will be subject to the tax hikes.

“Those who own three houses or more will face a tax rate hike of 0.1-1.2 percentage point, which will take the maximum ceiling to 3.2 per cent,” Kim explained.

“The same rule is to apply to those owning two or more houses in designated bubblepron­e zones.”

The Ministry of Economy and Finance had proposed in July a set of tax hike plans that focused on raising taxes on owners of multiple homes and of high-priced properties, seeking to reduce the nation’s widening income gap.

The core idea was a tax rate hike for real estate priced at 600 million won or above, with the maximum rate to be raised to 2.5 per cent from the convention­al two per cent.

This tax hike scheme, combined with the set of loan restrictio­ns introduced in August last year, was intended to discourage the rampant practices of multiple real estate ownership here.

‘Speculativ­e demands’

Housing prices, however, have continued to climb at a record pace over the past months. According to a KB Kookmin Bank real estate report, the average inflation rate of Seoul properties reached 6.85 per cent as of end-August, marking the steepest rise since 2006.

“The government plans place emphasis on blocking the speculativ­e demands of multiple property owners and on protecting those with actual housing demands,” the deputy prime minister said.

In line with such a policy tone, the government also vowed to expand the housing supply in the metropolit­an region by alleviatin­g rules concerning the designatio­n of residentia­l areas.

“The details of the supply plan will be announced on September 22, due to the ongoing policy coordinati­on processes with local government,” said Minister of Land, Infrastruc­ture and Transport Kim Hyun-mee.

In terms of financial regulation­s, the government also decided to tighten grip on lease operators, who were convention­ally exempted from the loan restrictio­ns.

“Those registered as lease operators in designated areas will also become subject to a loan-to-value ratio of 40 per cent,”

The change of rules for lease operators has been under fire as it was seen as delivering a blow to the government’s policy credibilit­y.

The Moon Jae-in administra­tion has so far offered tax benefits to owners of multiple homes who register themselves as lease business operators, encouragin­g them to reveal their assets and manage their tax affairs transparen­tly.

Whereas the Land Ministry suggested the reduction of benefits, the Finance Ministry maintained prudence over flipf l opping on t he pol i c y announced only months ago.

Meanwhile, a poll showed a majority of the public is in favour of raising the tax burden for affluent property owners.

According to a survey conducted by local pollster Realmeter, 56.4 per cent of the 500 respondent­s were supportive of the government’s comprehens­ive real estate tax plan, while 30.7 per cent were pessimisti­c.

 ?? AFP ?? South Korea plans to block the speculativ­e demands of multiple property owners and on protecting those with actual housing demands, according to Deputy Prime Minister Kim Dong-yeon.
AFP South Korea plans to block the speculativ­e demands of multiple property owners and on protecting those with actual housing demands, according to Deputy Prime Minister Kim Dong-yeon.

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