“We hope that better discounts will be given to the people, as high as possible,” Zuraida said in Kuala Lumpur on Monday. “We are trying to reduce the gap starting from the expo. From then on we will try to clean up.”
The average cost of a Malaysian home was five times the annual median household income in 2016, above the global standard of three times, Bank Negara Malaysia said in a quarterly bulletin posted in August.
Meanwhile, the number of residential units remaining unsold nine months after being completed rose 18% from a year ago to 29,227 units in the first half of 2018, according to the National Property Information Centre. That’s before accounting for almost 100,000 uncompleted units that were coming to the market.
The problem may lie in a mismatch between the type of homes Malaysians are looking to buy, and the luxury units that developers keep building. The central bank estimated that 282,000 ringgit was the maximum price achievable for the median Malaysian household, while actual median house prices was 11% higher, it said in the report.
The ministry will consider affordability in approving future residential projects by accounting for the income level in the area, Zuraida said. The government will start drafting the Residential Rental Act this year to protect the rights of tenants and landlords, while addressing issues of racial discrimination and quotas for Malays, she said.