Cape Argus

Western Cape semigratio­n brought about by its ‘proper administra­tion’

- ZOLANI SINXO zolani.sinxo@inl.co.za

THE WESTERN Cape’s political stability, good governance and booming economic opportunit­ies are some of the reasons that the province is experienci­ng “semigratio­n” in numbers, according to speakers of the Western Cape Property Developmen­t Forum’s (WCPDF) Annual conference held at the Cape Town Internatio­nal Convention Centre (CTICC).

Dominique dHotman, chief strategy officer at Ooba Home Loans, said one can see in the number of units of transactio­ns steadily increasing since the first quarter of 2019 that semigratio­n is real in the Western Cape.

“In 2019, 14% of the transactio­ns in the Western Cape were from buyers outside, now that is close to 24 and 25%. So that trend is upward sloping. You also see that other provinces also experience inbound migration.”

He said: “Right now, I think what we’re experienci­ng is that the Western Cape does certainly appear to be a much better-run municipali­ty. Or a province, sorry, and obviously because there are many municipali­ties in the Western Cape and people are essentiall­y voting with their feet and going to where they believe they will have better economic opportunit­ies, better lifestyles and better futures for themselves and their families,” said dHotman.

He said politics played an important role in the property developmen­t industry and immigratio­n.

“I think politics influences the administra­tion. The administra­tion influences the experience that people have in the municipali­ty and the province. A well-run province, well-run cities, where there’s good governance, there’s municipal performanc­e, service delivery, those things make a huge difference and people are coming to the Western Cape to live in a city where they get the services that they pay for,” he said.

DHotman also noted that black females are one of the biggest growing new property buyers in the province.

“This is not a new trend over the past five years. This is steadily growing, with black profession­als, and families moving and into taking out bonds, moving up the property ladder. We are seeing those increases.”

Deon van Zyl, WCPDF chairperso­n, said: “People are streaming into the Western Cape. So we are seeing our unemployme­nt levels are lower than the rest of the country. Our market is attractive, the perception is that governance is good, so we are attracting capital, capital leads to investment, investment leads to jobs, people are coming.”

He concluded: “What we are seeing at the moment, and I’m quite excited about it, we’re starting to see people spend money on their housing again, home improvemen­t, we are seeing the civil contractor­s, the guys that are working on roads and the sewage infrastruc­ture, those guys are incredibly busy. Everything that I’m seeing at the moment, assuming that things go well in the election, we’re about to see a property boom in South Africa.”

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