Prime Minister Lawrence Wong’s recent remarks about Build-To-Order (BTO) flat prices raise concerns about the potential misrepresentation of public housing affordability.
While he suggested that BTO flat prices are tied to household incomes rather than resale market conditions, the Housing Development Board’s (HDB) stated policies reveal otherwise. This apparent disconnect risks misleading the public about the underlying principles of housing pricing in Singapore.
Wong’s position: A narrative of affordability based on income
At a student dialogue on 21 January 2025, PM Wong emphasised that public housing in Singapore would always remain affordable.
He stated that BTO flat prices are determined in relation to household incomes, not the resale market, with affordability ensured through substantial government subsidies.
Wong reassured participants that most first-time flat buyers can service their mortgages entirely with their Central Provident Fund (CPF) contributions, often requiring little or no cash payments.
He also highlighted that rising flat prices over the decades have been accompanied by rising incomes, framing housing affordability as a function of both price and income growth.
Wong noted that the government has implemented measures to address high resale flat prices and high application rates for some BTO projects, ensuring affordable housing for Singaporeans in the long term.
HDB’s pricing mechanism: Tied to resale market values
However, the HDB’s description of its pricing framework contradicts this narrative.
According to the HDB, BTO flat prices are determined by starting with the market value of comparable resale flats in the same area. This market value accounts for factors such as location, flat attributes, and prevailing market conditions. HDB then applies a “market discount” to ensure affordability.
As stated on HDB’s website:
“The market values of new flats take into consideration recent transactions of resale comparables to account for different attributes and locational factors, with a substantial market discount applied to ensure affordability. The market discount ensures that BTO prices are pegged to household incomes, and will remain relatively stable despite movements in the resale market.”
While HDB applies affordability benchmarks, such as the Mortgage Servicing Ratio (MSR), and offers subsidies and grants to first-time buyers, these measures adjust affordability after the fact. They do not fundamentally alter the reliance on resale market values as the baseline for pricing.
The core issue: A misleading simplification
PM Wong’s remarks oversimplify the reality of BTO pricing by suggesting that flat prices are primarily based on income.
In reality, resale market prices remain the foundation of BTO pricing, with subsidies and grants ensuring that the resulting prices align with income levels. This hybrid approach is significantly different from a purely income-based pricing mechanism.
This distinction is important because it affects public understanding of housing affordability. By linking BTO flat prices to resale comparables, the system is inherently influenced by broader market trends. This means that during periods of rapid price increases in the resale market, BTO prices—despite discounts—may also rise, potentially straining affordability for some buyers who might be going through a rough patch in that particular phase of their lives.
Moreover, the affordability of BTO flats is not uniform across all income groups. Buyers who do not qualify for substantial subsidies or grants due to higher incomes or circumstances may find that their options are more limited than the government’s narrative implies.
The need for transparency
To address this issue, the government should adopt greater precision in communicating how BTO prices are determined.
Acknowledging that resale market values serve as the basis for pricing while highlighting the role of subsidies and grants in making flats affordable would provide a clearer and more accurate picture. This would also help manage expectations for Singaporeans navigating a challenging property market.
PM Wong’s emphasis on affordability is reassuring, but the mismatch between his statements and HDB’s policies raises legitimate questions about whether the narrative of income-based pricing obscures the system’s reliance on market comparables.
Clearer communication is essential to build public trust and ensure Singaporeans have a realistic understanding of housing affordability. It also raises an interesting question: if the Protection from Online Falsehoods and Manipulation Act (POFMA) applied to ministers, would Wong’s remarks have warranted a correction direction? His statements, while not entirely false, could be seen as misleading by omitting critical details about how BTO prices are actually determined.
Addressing this discrepancy is not merely a matter of semantics but of ensuring accountability, transparency, and public confidence in Singapore’s housing system.