Site icon Housing News

Average household income outpaces home price rise in Mumbai: Report

Average household income outpaces home price rise in Mumbai: Report

Mumbai recorded the third-highest growth in annual household incomes at 20.4% over a five-year period from 2014 to 2018, according to the inaugural issue of Knight Frank’s global report, ‘Urban Futures’. The growth in housing prices in the same period in Mumbai was only 8%, the report added. San Francisco in the US saw the highest rise in annual income at 25% in the five-year period, while Amsterdam at 63.6% (the Netherlands) recorded the highest rise in housing prices between 2014 and 2018. The report evaluated 32 cities across the world, to understand the difference between house prices and income and estimated the gap to be USD 740 billion in 2018.

Rank City Housing growth (percentage) Percentage growth in income
1 San Francisco 41.8 25.6
2 Moscow 0.1 22.7
3 Mumbai 8 20.4
4 Los Angeles 25.5 15.4
5 Singapore -2.8 14.9
6 Auckland 47 14.7
7 Kuala Lumpur 21.8 13.2
8 Dublin 61.9 13.2
9 Bangkok 33.3 12.2
10 Vancouver 57.6 12

Source: Knight Frank Research

Despite being India’s most expensive real estate market, Mumbai emerged among the more affordable cities amongst its global peers. Mumbai has seen real household income growth outpace real house price growth by 12.4%, indicating an improvement in affordability. The real house prices in comparison, have grown at a much slower pace of 8%, while the real disposable household income growth was over 20.4% in the five-year period ending 2018. The affordability in the city improved on account of reduced size of units, with largely stable prices. Consistent reduction in apartment sizes has also lowered the average ticket price for Mumbai. It is estimated that on an average, newly launched homes are smaller by 25% between 2014 and 2018. Maximum launches, especially in the last two years (2017 and 2018) have been in the affordable and mid-range segments, with ticket prices not exceeding Rs 75 lakhs.

Key findings of the report

See also: Property prices and trend forecast for key metro cities in 2019

Commenting on the report, Shishir Baijal, chairman and managing director, Knight Frank India, said, “Mumbai’s residential housing shortage has been a reason for concern, for most urban development agencies including the government. Similar to other global cities, Mumbai adds many new settlers every year, making it a difficult place to find housing. However, despite having India’s most expensive real estate, in comparison to its global peers, Mumbai remains more affordable. This should be viewed positively, as it indicates a further possibility of growth of global and Indian organisations in the city, who are always looking at locations that are strategic and yet, within the affordable range. Mumbai has seen a steady increment in average incomes, based on its economic growth, while the reduction in property prices has further enhanced affordability. The city has seen a drop of close to 7% in ticket prices, for new launches in 2018. With the recent announcement on the reduction in GST on under-construction projects, the effective payout by buyers is expected to reduce by a further 6-7%.”

Knight Frank’s Global Affordability Monitor analysed affordability across 32 cities, by taking into consideration three key measures – house price to income ratio, rent as a proportion of income and real house price growth compared to real income growth. Across the 32 cities, there was an average five-year real house price growth of 24%, while the average real income grew by only 8% over the same period. Overall, New York saw its income growth exceed real house price growth by 3% while Moscow, Singapore, Mumbai and Paris also saw their average real income over the last five years grow faster than real house prices. Moscow saw the largest difference where real income growth outpaced real house price growth by 22%.

Knight Frank global affordability monitor

Least affordable Second least affordable
Amsterdam

Auckland

Hong Kong

Los Angeles

San Francisco

Sydney

Toronto

Vancouver

Bangkok

Berlin

Dublin

London

Melbourne

New York

Singapore

Tokyo

More affordable Most affordable
Brussels

Cape Town

Madrid

Miami

Moscow

Mumbai

Paris

Stockholm

Dubai

Istanbul

Jakarta

Kuala Lumpur

Lisbon

Manila

Rome

Sao Paolo

Ways in which cities can tackle housing affordability

(Analysis covers Mumbai, San Francisco, London, Hong Kong and New York)

Was this article useful?
  • ? (2)
  • ? (0)
  • ? (0)
Exit mobile version