The
International Monetary Fund’s (IMF) recently launched data series on global housing prices hints at that.
Among 52 major markets for which IMF has collated house
price data, India has witnessed the steepest fall.
IMF’s calculation on the annual percentage change in
property prices shows that prices in India fell by 9.1%, the highest among
major real estate markets. The fall is even worse than in countries struggling
with the ongoing European Union’s financial crisis.
Property prices in Greece, Italy, Cyprus, Spain &
Portugal have all come down, but at a much slower rate.
Ireland, on the other hand, registered a 4.3 % increase
in property prices.
Prices came down by 7 % in Greece, 6.5 % in Italy, 4.9 %
in Spain and 3.3 % in Portugal.
The annual change is calculated for latest available data
or prices for the last quarter of 2013.
The data shows there is an overall improvement in the
global real estate market as prices are going up in a majority of countries. Of
the 52 countries for which data is available, 33 have witnessed increase in
prices, while property has become cheaper in 19.
Among advanced economies, the US, Germany & UK
witnessed an increase in prices whereas the property market seems to be
slumping in France, Japan and Italy. Among larger emerging economies, China,
Brazil and South Africa saw a rise in prices, while India and Russia face a sinking
realty sector.
The IMF website states that the new data series released
in June this year (2014) is aimed at keeping track of property boom-and bust
cycles. Boom-bust cycles in housing prices in housing prices have predated many
banking crises in recent times.
Global Property Guide, one of the IMF's sources for real
estate data, also confirms the downward trend of India's housing market. The
organization, which collates real estate data from across the world, links this
to high interest rates and slow GDP growth.
India's own National Housing Bank (NHB) Residex index
shows a mixed trend in Q1 2014, with 13 of the 26 cities for which property
price data was available witnessing an increase in prices & 13 registering
declines.
Global Property Guide's analysis of India says that
because of high inflation, a comparison of house prices at nominal rates might
give a misleading result. At inflation-adjusted rates prices, it says, prices
have actually fallen in 21 of these 26 cities.
Even these numbers might not give a might not give a real
picture of India's highly unregulated property market and the problem might be
much bigger.
According to Global Real Estate Transparency Index -
2014, a `fairness in property trans actions' ranking complied by a US based
real-estate consultancy , India's property market falls under the
semitransparent category .
Among 102 major real estate markets ranked by the
consultancy , India's tier 1 cities' property market is ranked 40th while tier
- 2 & tier-3 markets are 42nd
& 50th respectively in the world.
All of them are labelled semi-transparent.
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