Puri says the budget needs to focus on larger market
Given that real estate contributes more than 8% to the Indian economy, it has justifiable expectations from the Union Budget 2021-22 as there are several opportunities to give the sector a shot in the arm, according to Anuj Puri, Chairman – ANAROCK Property Consultants.
The housing industry needs focused measures to further bolster demand in 2021. This year, the demands go beyond the usual suspects of single-window clearance and industry status, Puri pointed out.
“Affordable housing is very likely to get another booster shot. However, the budget also needs to focus on the larger market as more than ever before, homebuyers and investors need focused tax incentives to get mobilized.
“Also, as the government is aware, developers’ liquidity woes need to alleviated to forestall further market mayhem,” he said.
Puri listed the demands:
Hike the Rs.2 lakh tax rebate on housing loan interest rates under Section 24 of the Income Tax Act to at least Rs.5 lakh to generate healthier housing demand, most notably in affordable and mid-segment housing.
Personal tax relief, either by tax rate reductions or amended tax slabs – the last increase in the deduction limit under Section 80C (to Rs.1.5 lakh a year) was in 2014 and an upward revision is long overdue.
GST waiver for under-construction homes – The present GST rate on under-construction properties is 5% minus the ITC benefit for premium homes (Rs.45 lakh) and 1% for affordable homes (Rs.45 lakh). Even a limited period waiver of GST will reduce overall property cost and thus push demand for under-construction homes, which have been slacking presently. Funds from buyers can aid developers towards project construction and thus lessen their dependence on financial institutions. The most-recent limited-period Stamp Duty cut in Maharashtra significantly boosted demand in both MMR and Pune.
More incentives for private sector investments in affordable housing – despite the benefit of infrastructure status for this critically important segment, developers are unable to get funding from major banks and NBFCs at affordable cost. The profit margins for affordable housing projects continue to be extremely low.
Ease liquidity – The liquidity crunch had a cascading impact across sectors, including real estate. Project delays – the biggest fallout of the cash crunch – had severely dampened buyer sentiments in last two years. Developers need a rational capital flow to keep up the supply pipeline, especially for ready-to-move-in homes which are in highest demand – healthy. Increased supply also helps to keep property prices range bound.
Puri acknowledged the multiple measures that were announced in 2020 to beat the unprecedented impact of COVID-19 on the overall economy and the real estate industry. These included:
- RBI’s massive repo rate cut of 140 bps (leading to the lowest home loan interest rates in over 15 years);
- A six-month moratorium on EMIs;
- Restructuring of loans of real estate companies at the project level;
- At a state level, stamp duty reductions in Maharashtra;
- A liquidity boost to NHB, and
- The first real-time deployments of rescue capital from the SWAMIH fund.
These measures were proactive and commendable – but not surprisingly, given the depth of pain in the real estate sector, they were not enough, he said. #economy #debts #banking #projects #housing #RERA #investment /fiinews.com