The Borneo Post

Saudi housing crisis tests Crown Prince’s reform drive

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RIYADH: Saudi Arabia’s crown prince wants to build a mega-city with the latest robotics under his grand plan to reform the kingdom.

Civil servant Amer al-Ghamdi has a simpler dream: to buy an affordable home.

Whether Ghamdi and some 1.2 million Saudis in a similar financial position manage to do so will be vital if Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman is to convince his people that the reform plan will benefit not just the superrich.

Ghamdi, 35, spends most of his US$2,670 monthly wage paying back loans he took to get married and buy a car. He and his wife, Hanan, now have three children and struggle to save money.

Buying a home is out of the question. A 250-square meter (2,691 square feet) house in Saudi cities costs from 700,000 to 850,000 riyals

I tried to look for one of my relatives in Saudi to pay off my debts and give me a down payment to apply for a house at one of the commercial banks, but the interest will be very high and I am already paying a lot. Amer al-Ghamdi, Civil servant

(US$186,000 to US$226,000), said Ibrahim Albuloushi, head of US property consultant Jones Lang LaSalle in Saudi Arabia.

That is up to 10 times the annual salary for a low-income family in the Gulf Arab state.

“I tried to look for one of my relatives in Saudi to pay off my debts and give me a down payment to apply for a house at one of the commercial banks, but the interest will be very high and I am already paying a lot,” said Ghamdi, who lives in the capital Riyadh.

Saudi Arabia, the world’s top oil exporter, was once awash in petrodolla­rs. This helped it provide a cradle-to-grave welfare system for its citizens with almost no taxation.

But a slump in oil prices has made fiscal discipline and diversific­ation away from oil vital. Prince Mohammed’s Vision 2030 plan sets out to modernise the economy and reform the deeply conservati­ve country, the birthplace of Islam.

The young prince, 32, has moved forcefully and rapidly where earlier leaders moved gradually and achieved moderate results. Affordable homes

Some Saudis, however, are skeptical. Western media have reported extravagan­t purchases by the crown prince, including a US$300 million French chateau and a US$500 million yacht.

In response to a question about these reports in an interview with US network CBS in March, Prince Mohammed said his personal life was “something I’d like to keep to myself” but that he was a rich man who also made donations to charity.

The first contracts awarded for the NEOM business zone megaprojec­t in the northwest of the country were for five palaces for the royal family.

Some critics say the pace of reform is too fast. They cite cuts to a generous subsidy system and the introducti­on of value-added tax early this year, moves that have hit some Saudis hard and eaten away at savings.

Compoundin­g problems, the population has grown. It reached 32.55 million in 2017, a rise of 44 per cent from 2004, and Riyadh’s boundaries are growing rapidly.

The housing minister says there are plans to build one million houses in five years with an investment of over US$100 billion, mainly through public- private partnershi­ps. Deals have been signed with South Korean and Chinese firms and US companies have expressed interest.

“Real estate is the mirror of the economy. You cannot build homes if people cannot afford to buy them,” said Abdullah al- Sudairy, chief executive of mortgage finance company Amlak Internatio­nal.

“Affordable housing means cost is five to six times annual income... We are not there yet.”

The ministry wants 60 per cent of Saudis to own homes by 2020. It is working with local banks to facilitate financing and help developers increase the supply of affordable units by reducing red tape. Waiting list

Some 500,000 Saudis are on a waiting list for the Saudi Real Estate Developmen­t Fund (REDF), an arm of the housing ministry which offers Saudis interest-free loans to buy state-backed houses which cost around 650,000 riyals. This can be paid in long-term monthly installmen­ts of up to 2,500 riyals each.

Khalid al-Amoudi, REDF general supervisor, said most could have access to finance in the next three years.

Ghamdi has been on the waiting list since 2011 and relief is nowhere in sight.

He has asked his wife to look for a job. But the last offer she received at a food factory offered only 3,500 riyals a month, most of which would have been used to put her infant daughter in nursery and for transporta­tion costs.

Ghamdi is worried about taking out a new bank loan because of fears the government may make further cuts in state spending.

Salman al- Shedoukhi, a 30year-old engineer with a monthly income of 15,000 riyals, also wonders if he will ever receive a government-backed house.

“To get bank financing for an average 900,000-riyal home, you will end up paying double this amount. It means I would spend 20 years using half my salary to pay off the loan,” he said.

To save money, he has moved into his father’s house with his wife and two daughters. But he is still burdened by a loan taken out four years ago to get married. No room for error

Members of the Shura Council, a government advisory body, have criticised the housing ministry for slow progress in solving the problem and fulfilling citizens’ aspiration­s, questionin­g the number of land plots handed over.

“The housing ministry’s biggest achievemen­t is chaining the citizens with a big loan from commercial banks and a bigger monthly installmen­t,” Abu Yazid Al Huwaiti, a Saudi citizen, wrote in a Twitter post in April. — Reuters

 ??  ?? Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince Mohammad Salman wants to build a mega-city with the latest robotics under his grand plan to reform the kingdom. Civil servant Amer al-Ghamdi has a simpler dream: to buy an affordable home. — Reuters photo
Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince Mohammad Salman wants to build a mega-city with the latest robotics under his grand plan to reform the kingdom. Civil servant Amer al-Ghamdi has a simpler dream: to buy an affordable home. — Reuters photo

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