Obama
Pursues Apartment Rental Dream to Connect with Soviet Past
Communists are such dreamers. They can hardly wait to impose their vision
of paradise on us. But…..timing is
everything.
Medvedev
Pursues Russian Home-Ownership `Dream' To Break With Soviet Past
By Anastasia Ustinova
- Jun 9, 2010
President Dmitry Medvedev’s
government has acquired almost 2.5 million
acres, an area larger than Cyprus, to promote construction of single-family
homes and move Russians out of Soviet-style apartment blocks, the official in
charge of the effort said.
To achieve that goal, the government
will have to change the way people think about housing, said Alexander Braverman, general director of
the property fund Medvedev created in 2008 to help developers build homes.
“For a long time our people were trained to
live in high- rise apartment buildings, and we have to admit openly that this
habit remains,” Braverman said this week in an interview in Moscow. “We’ll have
to create a program to stimulate demand, and we’ll begin this work in the near
future. Call it the Russian dream. I think we can make this dream come true.”
Medvedev says ownership of
single-family homes is the best way to expand Russia’s middle class, creating
an engine for economic and demographic expansion. Billionaire Mikhail Gutseriev’s
Mospromstroi and Alexander Lebedev’s
National Housing Corp. are lining up to profit from the boom if the president
succeeds in creating a market.
‘Cooped
Up’ in Apartments
Seventy-seven percent of Russia’s
142 million people are “cooped up” in apartments, a legacy of Soviet policies
that “excluded everything oriented toward the individual,” Medvedev said in
April 2008 as he unveiled his
home-building program. In the U.S., 67 percent of homes are owner-occupied,
according to the Census Bureau.
At least 14 million square meters of
housing will be under construction next year on land owned by the Federal Fund for the Promotion of Housing Construction
Development, Braverman said. That will rise to 20 million square
meters in 2012, or about 30 percent of residential construction volume.
“We think that people who have their
own homes, driveways and careers are fundamentally different than those who
don’t have these things,” Braverman said. “The person who has something to
defend is a different kind of person.”
To overcome the legacy of Soviet
collectivism, the fund plans an advertising blitz including TV, print and
billboards to persuade Russians of the advantages of home ownership, he said.
Subsidized
Mortgages
Medvedev’s plan looks like the
“American dream” of home ownership turned upside-down, said Nadezhda Kosareva,
president of the Institute of Urban Economics, a research group in Moscow.
“In the U.S. in the 1960s, the
demand for homes came first and the government provided the rest, while in
Russia the government is trying to push the idea from above,” she said.
Medvedev’s home-ownership drive has
been hampered by mortgage rates that averaged 13.8 percent on 83.7 billion
rubles ($2.6 billion) of loans since the start of the year, central bank data
show.
To spur borrowing, the government is
providing 11 percent home loans subsidized by the federal mortgage agency,
Braverman said. Prime Minister Vladimir Putin said
in February that rates are too high for many potential borrowers and the
government will spend 250 billion rubles this year to reduce them.
Medvedev insisted the homes built
under the program be affordable, naming a figure of 20,000 rubles ($631) a
square meter. Braverman later quoted a price of 30,000 rubles. The average May
residential property price on Moscow’s secondary market was $4,406 per square
meter, according to the Indicators of Property Market.
‘Terrible
Need’
“There’s a terrible need for
affordable housing in Russia,” said Nuri Katz, chief executive officer of
Century 21 Russia. “The question is how much money the government can afford to
give out to support the mortgage business.”
The government incentives aren’t likely to spur lending on a big scale,
Katz said.
“It’s a simple real estate rule:
Without the widespread availability of affordable mortgages, there will be no
widespread availability of affordable housing,” Katz said.
Braverman’s fund has auctioned off
the rights to develop 29 parcels of land nationwide, and plans 46 more this
year. To attract developers, the fund guarantees it will buy as much as 35
percent of the homes built,
Braverman said.“We have no problem
with demand” from developers, he said. “We strive to reduce risks on our
properties, but the rate of return remains the same, so investors are
interested. The enormous volume and potential of the market also makes us
attractive.”
Billionaire
Builders
The fund is “absolutely open” to
foreign investors, Braverman said.
Mospromstroi, the builder controlled
by the Gutseriev family’s BIN Group, according to Forbes magazine, won auctions
to develop more than 36 hectares near Moscow. Gutseriev’s fortune is estimated
at $2.2 billion by Forbes.
National Housing Corp. has 10 plants
with a capacity to make 20,000 prefabricated homes a year. Even so, Lebedev
says he needs state aid.
“People can’t buy houses because
they don’t have enough money,” Lebedev said in an interview. “I want to lower
the price to make it affordable for them, but the company has to generate
profit. I can’t do it alone.”
The number of middle-class Russians,
those with monthly disposable incomes of more than $1,000, fell about 48
percent last year to about 13.6 million people, or roughly 9.6 percent of the
population, Vladimir Osakovsky,
an economist at UniCredit SpA, said on May 20. The middle class will recover to
its “pre- crisis peak” in 2011 and double by 2013, according to Osakovsky.
Lebedev, whose fortune Forbes
estimates at $2 billion, said he has invested more than 200 million euros ($239
million) in the factories, and is looking for partners, including the state.
The fund “would be happy to work
with him, but under the general guidelines” for all developers, Braverman said.
“Our basic position is that we don’t build.”
To contact the reporter on this
story: Anastasia Ustinova in
St. Petersburg at austinova@bloomberg.net
Comments:
I can see
it now… happy Russian renters being drug off to Siberia and being forced to buy
a government subsidized house shouting,
“but I don’t want to shovel snow or cut grass. ….comrade. This was
written in 2010. I bet these Russian
billionaires are with
Soros placing hedge fund bets against J.P. Morgan.
Norb
Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
Interesting stuff, thanks for sharing!
ReplyDelete