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12:45pm 26/12/2022
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14 years a miser…to be a home owner in Seoul
By:Yoon Min-sik / The Korea Herald / ANN

An average wage earner in South Korea would have to save up one’s entire income for 14 years to buy a home in Seoul, a government study showed Wednesday.

The price-to-income ratio — the median home price divided by the median annual household income — for Seoul in 2021 jumped to 14.1 from 12.5 in the year before, according to the 2021 Korea Housing Survey released by the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and Transport.

The figure was higher than that of any other region in the country, with Sejong being the only other city where it was in double digits, at 11.3.

The PIR increased for all regions in the country, and the nationwide figure was 6.7, up from 5.5 in the year before. Following Seoul and Sejong were Gyeonggi Province, Daejeon, Daegu, with 9.9, 7.7 and 7.5, respectively.

The ratio of homeowners in the greater Seoul area — comprising of the nation’s capital and Gyeonggi Province — logged a slight increase from 53 percent to 54.7 percent, while the rest of the country marked a slight decrease. The figure for the entire country was unchanged at 60.6 percent.

Housing prices and related policies have always been a key point of interest for South Koreans.

This photo taken Monday shows the apartment complexes in Seoul, seen from Namsan Mountain. YONHAP

The previous Moon Jae-in administration was widely criticized for its housing policy, with some 76 percent of the respondents in a January survey by Data Research saying it was “not doing well” on housing, despite the outgoing president’s relatively-high overall approval rating of 44.1 percent.

President Yoon Suk-yeol has vowed to loosen regulations on real estate to increase supply of homes since his campaigning days, leading up to his election victory in March of this year.

While house prices have risen, rents have become more affordable. The annual government report released Wednesday also showed that the national rent-to-income ratio dropped from 16.6 percent in 2020 to 15.7 percent in 2021.

It took an average head of a family 7.7 years to buy his or her first home, the same as the year before.

The survey showed that 88.9 percent of the respondents showed that owning a home is necessary, up from 87.7 percent the year before. Newlyweds in particular showed a strong desire to own a home, at 90.7 percent

In the interest of achieving that goal, 41.3 percent said there was a need for government-funded housing support programs. Specifically, loans for purchasing homes (36 percent), loans for deposits when renting homes (23.9 percent), providing more long-term public housing (10.9 percent), and rent support (9.8 percent).

The annual report was conducted on 51,000 households across the country, the details of which have been made public on the homepage of the MOLIT Statistics System, provided in Korean and English.

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