Jake's View | Crux of Hong Kong's pricey homes lies with Fed policies
We may end up overbuilding by wrongly attributing high housing prices to shortages

A cloud was cast over the government's new long-term housing strategy even as it was unveiled yesterday, with warnings that meeting targets depended on finding suitable land and resolving community conflicts.
You have to laugh. The long-term housing strategy steering committee had already so thoroughly leaked and trial-ballooned its proposals that by the time it actually published them, there was nothing left to say but why they wouldn't work.

It's just as well. This consultation paper is mostly a political document, long on the slogans and ideology of the public housing lobby but somewhat shorter on detailed statistical analysis.
For instance, it baldly proclaims that "the crux of our housing problem lies with supply-demand imbalance".
How good to know. We have it defined then, which is something I have sought ever since a policy address two years ago in which our previous chief executive cited figures showing that we have 250,000 more flats in our housing stock than we have households. He must have got that wrong, said his underlings privately. I never saw it set right.
