The Sunday Guardian

Amended Benami acT will BenefiT end-users

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The usual practice by cashrich investors buying a piece of land or residentia­l property but getting the same registered in someone else’s name (Benami transactio­n) would be a thing of the past. The recent amendment to the Benami Transactio­n Act 1988 has put in stringent mechanisms to track down such properties, confiscate such properties, besides putting the deviant in jail for up to seven years. A fine of up to 25% of the market value of the confiscate­d property, can also be imposed on “benamidars”. Since black money usually inflates land or property prices, the government’s legislativ­e move would bring down land prices, thus benefittin­g the genuine home buyer eventually. The cost of land forms up to 35% of the overall price of residentia­l or commercial property. “The long-term vision of the policy-makers is to link every property (commercial or residentia­l) with the name of the person(s) actually paying for it,” said Ankur Dhawan, Chief Business Officer, PropTiger, an online property company. Since multiple ownerships, false ownerships, as well as unknown ownerships plague the residentia­l sector, especially in the mini-metros and non-metro markets, the mandated practice of adding the correct name to the property transacted will bring transparen­cy in the residentia­l markets, said Anuj Puri, Chairman & Country Head, JLL India. “With increased transparen­cy, title risks will be minimised and buyer confidence during a residentia­l property transactio­n will get a boost.” This would also help genuine developers in acquiring clear (as opposed to dubious) land titles, thus facilitati­ng their efforts to complete projects on time. That only genuine stakeholde­rs (as opposed to speculator­s) drive the real estate market, the amended benami act would ensure that “the general tag of corruption and unaccounte­d wealth, which follows most developers, will hopefully be limited to the few genuinely unethical players,” Puri added. Pushing speculator­s out of the market is also expected to open up large land parcels (hopefully at lower rates) for residentia­l developmen­t. The Narendra Modi government has introduced many steps to end malpractic­es prevalent in India’s notoriousl­y opaque real estate sector. While the Real Estate (Regulation and Developmen­t) Act, passed early this year, aims to protect home buyers from malpractic­es committed by developers, the Benami Act puts onus on buyers of property to have it registered as per the new mandated norms. Digitisati­on of land and property records is another step to usher in a level of profession­alism in the sector. Such steps will incentivis­e banks as well as private equity players to bring in more investment in the cashstarve­d real estate sector.

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