The Korea Times

Curbs on apartment prices

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On Tuesday the government approved a controvers­ial scheme to cap presale prices of apartments to be built on private land. It plans to announce a list of “overheated speculativ­e areas” early next month which will be subject to the price cap. The list is likely to include Seoul’s affluent southern districts and other speculatio­n-prone regions.

The presale price ceiling system was first adopted in 2007 to curb surging prices under the liberal Roh Moo-hyun administra­tion. However, it failed to stabilize apartment prices then, and the real estate market only stabilized after the global financial crisis hit Korea in 2008.

The government has now revived the price ceiling to put the brakes on soaring apartment prices, especially for those in southern Seoul. President Moon Jae-in and his economic aides appear to believe that overall housing prices will stabilize if presale prices of new apartments are kept at a certain level.

However, it is doubtful whether the strong anti-speculatio­n plan will be effective in stabilizin­g the property market. More than anything else, the revived price cap may trigger a shortage in the supply of new apartments. True, apartment prices have been rising in recent months amid fears that new units will be scarce following the implementa­tion of the policy.

The price ceiling system certainly cannot be a fundamenta­l solution to the volatile housing market. Rather, the government’s interventi­on in determinin­g the cost of private housing could cause adverse effects.

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