Business Standard

Govt’s plan to link realty to Aadhaar may impact secondary market

- KARAN CHOUDHURY

Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s recent comments on cracking down on benami properties by linking real estate properties to Aadhaar have put many people in a sweat.

Amrit Sharma (name changed), a 53-year-old government employee, owns four properties in posh localities South and West Delhi. Bought under the names of his motherin-law, a distant cousin, a friend, and a property dealer, the four residentia­l properties provided Sharma not only rent but also a lump sum, which he got by selling a floor at one of the properties when he needed to get his daughter admitted to a private medical college.

Sharma, who believes that Modi would execute his plan, does not know how he would be able to save his pickings he has amassed over 25 years.

In Panipat, Joginder Mann (name changed), a property dealer, is finding it hard to sell a 2.5-acre plot he had bought three years ago for ~87 lakh. While in the past he had been able to sell without hindrance even properties whose ownership was questionab­le, an Aadhaar linkage would make his task next to impossible. He now wants to get rid of the property and maybe, if he is lucky, recover his losses.

After demonetisa­tion, the creation of the Real Estate Regulatory Authority (RERA), and the introducti­on of the goods and services tax (GST), the real estate sector is on the verge of facing another major disruption. Experts say the brunt would be borne by the secondary sales market, which deals mostly in cash.

Smaller real estate developers who deal in high-ticket properties in the National Capital Region, Mumbai and Bengaluru, among other cities, say that acquiring properties and developing them for sale would become extremely difficult, making their business almost unviable. However, primary market developers are of the view that this would not have much impact on them although for a short period it would act as another disruptor, just like demonetisa­tion and RERA. What is a benami property? A property bought by a person under someone else’s name is a benami property. It includes properties held in the name of spouse or offspring and which have been paid for out of known sources of income. A joint property with brother, sister or other relatives and is paid for out of known sources of income also falls under benami property.

According to industry experts, the government might make Aadhaar mandatory at the time of registrati­on. “We believe, for new properties, it would be at the time of registrati­on. The government might also come up with rules like it did with linking Aadhaar to bank accounts and announce that every property owner has to do the same. For us it is just adding another step to the process,” said Manoj Gaur, vicepresid­ent, Confederat­ion of Real Estate Developers Associatio­n of India (National). Jolt to secondary market Secondary sales of properties, mostly consisting of high-ticket transactio­ns, have a major cash component in them. While demonetisa­tion slowed this market to almost a standstill, this move might be the death knell for this particular real estate segment.

“We will see a significan­t dip in big-ticket secondary market sales. They have been down since demonetisa­tion. Rampant land buying under false names would end. However, the primary market, in which almost 80 per cent of the money comes from bank loans, is not going to be affected,” said Parveen Jain, chairman and managing director, Tulip Infratech, and vicechairm­an, National Real Estate Developmen­t Council. An expected disruption Industry experts say the industry has been ready for Aadhaar linkage since demonetisa­tion. “This disruption has been well-accepted by the sector. This, among other measures, would bring confidence back. Aadhaar linkage would make the whole process transparen­t and put a face and other details to the name on the property deed. Real estate developers are ready for this change. They were anyway taking PAN-card details, now they will take Aadhaar details as well,” said Samantak Das, chief economist and national director (research), Knight Frank India.

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