3 Quarks Daily - American homeownership peaked in 2004 at 69.4 percent and today
hovers at around 65 percent which is still favorable to the entire 1960s
when homeownership was around 63 percent. Imagine a country with
90 percent homeownership. Imagine what it would mean to have a society
with that rate of homeownership – with that high a level of security and
wealth accumulation. That’s exactly what Lee Kuan Yew,
Singapore’s founding Prime Minister did. Although educated in economics
and law at University, Lee Kuan Yew noticed as a child the differences
between neighborhoods dominated by homeownership versus those that were
mostly rented. Cleanliness, stability and low crime rates were among the
benefits of an owned neighborhood. In 1965 when Singapore declared its independence
both from the Malaysian Federation from which it was ejected and from
the United Kingdom from which it was being decolonized, Singapore had a
roughly 27 percent homeownership rate. Shockingly low. Going from 27 to 90 percent
homeownership in less than 30 years was – as it sounds – no small feat.
Singapore’s founding leaders were systems thinkers and saw the
connections how certain actions could synergize to multiple benefits. MORE
No comments:
Post a Comment