The Korea Herald

지나쌤

Housing price decline expected to accelerate: finance minister

By Yonhap

Published : Feb. 3, 2022 - 09:20

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This photo, taken Jan 16, 2021, shows apartment buildings in Seoul. (Yonhap) This photo, taken Jan 16, 2021, shows apartment buildings in Seoul. (Yonhap)
Finance Minister Hong Nam-ki said Thursday the country's housing prices are expected to pick up their declining pace amid the central bank's rate hike and tighter lending rules.

Hong said the government is committed to implementing its current real estate policy with a focus on increasing the home supply in a bid to stabilize housing prices.

"We think housing prices need to undergo a downward correction to some degree, given that home prices have excessively risen. The government plans to stick to its housing policy to stabilize housing prices," Hong said in a meeting on the housing policy.

Sales prices of apartments in Seoul fell 0.01 percent in the fourth week of January from a week earlier, marking the first decline in 20 months, according to the Korea Real Estate Board.

The index measuring people's expectations for housing prices came to 100 for January, down seven points from a month earlier, according to a survey by the Bank of Korea (BOK).

Hong has warned of a potential fall in housing prices, saying excessive demand for homebuying could decline, affected by the BOK's rate hikes and tighter lending rules.

On Jan. 14, the BOK raised the key interest rate by a quarter percentage point to 1.25 percent. It marked the third rate increase since it made its first pandemic-era rate hike in August last year.

Since July last year, the financial regulator has applied stricter lending calculations for mortgage loans to put a lid on growing household debt.

The government has unleashed a series of comprehensive measures to stem rising home prices, including tax hikes and tighter lending rules. But the regulation resulted in only a short-term letup in rising housing prices due to strong demand for home purchases.

In February last year, the government unveiled a plan to increase the number of new homes by up to 836,000 nationwide in the next four years. (Yonhap)