Infra Talk: Easing of land prices to boost affordable housing, writes Anuj Puri

Post-demonetization, the affordable housing segment will get a much-needed boost.

Update: 2016-12-24 06:34 GMT
Anuj Puri, Chairman and Country Head, JLL India

Chennai

Confined to the fringe areas of metros, this segment is expected to get a boost as land prices will plummet in the next few years, especially in far-flung areas around Indian metros, and the tierII, III cities. Most agricultural land transactions involved a cash component, which got affected after PM Modi’s announcement on the evening of November 8. 

INR 500 and INR 1,000 notes ceased to exist as legal tender from November 9. Land dealings involving a cash component, therefore, will no longer be carried out in the old ways. Those dealing in cash will be unable to pay in the old currency notes and those with undeclared sources of income would fear paying entirely in white as that will carry a risk of attracting the I-T department’s scrutiny. 

While the areas within metropolitan limits will be saved from land devaluation due to their high-demand and low-supply scenario, their poorer cousins – the fringe areas – will see an impact after a year or so. As land prices ease in these areas, ticket sizes of apartments are also expected to come down. This should help bring house prices closer to the affordability of many salaried home buyers and spur real estate demand – this time, driven largely by end users and not speculative investors. 

Housing in certain precincts to become more affordable than others There is a high possibility of prices softening in sub-markets or precincts located away from the city centres and which have seen a lot of housing supply in recent years. 

Tier-II and III cities, especially those driven by business communities, will see higher impact of demonetization and easing in land prices in the medium-to-long term. 

Other cities also have fringe areas where prices will ease. However, such locations will need to be observed over the next six-twelve months to understand by when, and what margin, the prices there will soften and local demand-supply dynamics could bring about a change in some of these areas.

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