by Mr. Harsh Roongta, Apnapaisa.com
Till the late 1980s,
it was the standard middle class dream to be able to somehow cobble enough
money to buy one's house.
You scrimped &
saved for many years, sold some family jewels & borrowed from friends &
family.
Overtime, you somehow
paid back friends and family.
The script changed in
the 1980s with the arrival of housing finance companies (HFCs), pioneered by
HDFC. Now, instead of borrowing from friends & family, you could take a
housing loan.
The only difference
is you have to begin repayment immediately and pay back on a regular basis till
eternity (or / so it feels).
Given the easy
availability of home loans, the number of people who can buy their own home has
multiplied exponentially. This has resulted in the rent-versus-buy debate
arriving on Indian shores as well, as has been agitating financial literates in
the West.
Does it make sense to
buy your own house or / to stay on rent? There are quite a few calculators
(ranging from the basic ones to fairly sophisticated ones that include
increases in rent, municipal taxes, capital gains on property and tax treatment,
etc) used by proponents on either side to portray their case.
The results almost
always show that staying on rent makes more financial sense, unless you take
very aggressive assumptions about the rate at which home prices will increase
in the future. Contrary to popular perception, the average long-term return (10
years plus) on residential real estate in India barely touches double digits
and if you factor that into account, the rent-versus-buy calculators give very
much the same results in India as in the West.
Strictly financially
speaking, it makes sense to stay on rent rather than buy your own home. I can
show these results to anyone interested but can confirm we have taken into
account the tax benefits on home loans (the most asked question) before
arriving at this decision.
Yet, I have always
advocated that people buy their own home as soon as they have made a commitment
to stay in a city and have the necessary down payment as well as the future
repayment capacity to pay off the home loan. The reason for this supposedly
contradictory stance is explained below.
In most Western
countries, conforming to social norms is not such a big thing as in India. In
fact, Western norms emphasise independence rather than conformance. It is the
social norm In India to own your own home (even with a fat loan) and it is
difficult to defy this norm by emphasising you are doing this because your
calculations show that staying on rent is better.
The look in your friends'
or family members' eyes will confirm they think you have come up with an
innovative excuse for inability to buy a house. The social expectation is so
high that the cost of not conforming to it becomes high in terms of the
insecurity it causes in your (or your spouse's) mind.
Conversely, the sense
of stability derived by owning your own home (even if it entails EMIs till
eternity) is a big benefit. None of the calculators takes either this cost or
benefit into account since, it is not really quantifiable.
Also, most people
argue (justifiably so, in my opinion) that the calculator assumes the monies
saved by renting your home will be invested, which unfortunately rarely
happens. We love the forced savings that is inbuilt in the loan EMI repayment
and most people would just end up spending the money saved by renting the
place, rather than investing it in alternative options.
For all these
reasons, I universally recommend to my clients to buy their own homes (of a
value they can afford). This recommendation obviously does not cover buying a
house as an investment or for renting out. That is a completely different
story.
Do you agree with my
reasoning?
Welcome your
comments.
About the author
The writer Harsh Roongta is director at apnapaisa.com
Apna Paisa -
Telephone
91-22-6613 1999
Monday to Friday 10 am to 7 pm (IST)
(Except public holidays)
(Except public holidays)
Apna Paisa Marketing and Services Private Limited,
B5/B7,Ground Floor,
Shriram Industrial Estate,
G. D. Ambekar Road, Wadala,
Mumbai - 400 031
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