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Australia vows to jail foreigners who buy property illegally

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Australia vows to jail foreigners who buy property illegally


PUBLISHED : Sunday, 03 May, 2015, 11:49pm
UPDATED : Monday, 04 May, 2015, 3:13am

Agencies in Sydney

abbott.jpg


Foreign investors who illegally buy houses in Australia face hefty fines and prison terms of up to three years, PM Tony Abbott said. Photo: AP

Foreign investors who illegally buy houses in Australia and agents that enable them face hefty fines and prison terms of up to three years under new penalties aimed at cooling soaring property prices.

The new and expanded punishments come in the wake of rising foreign investment in Australian real estate and widespread evidence of abuse of current laws that prevent foreign buyers from purchasing existing homes.

Sentences may stretch to three years and fines to A$637,500 (HK$3.9 million) for illicit buyers, with penalties also on third parties knowingly complicit in violations, Prime Minister Tony Abbott said. The steps were needed to give the public confidence that foreign-investment rules on property purchases were being enforced, he said.

The penalties will tighten scrutiny on overseas buyers at a time when record-low interest rates are driving up Sydney property prices five times faster than wages. A company owned by Chinese billionaire Hui Ka-yan's Evergrande Real Estate Group - which illegally bought a A$39 million mansion overlooking Sydney Harbour - had sold the site to an Australian citizen, Treasurer Joe Hockey said on Friday.

"What we want to do is ensure that illegal foreign investment is not unnecessarily driving up prices," Abbott said. "If you don't play by the rules there will be a tough penalty regime in place, and those penalties will be enforced."

Overseas buyers are only allowed to purchase newly built homes in Australia and need the permission of the Foreign Investment Review Board. Approved overseas purchases of Australian homes more than doubled to A$34.7 billion in the year ended last June, with China overtaking the US as the biggest source of capital, the board said in its annual report last Thursday.

Sydney ranked third among the least-affordable major metropolitan housing markets worldwide, after Hong Kong and Vancouver, according to a report in January by Demographia.

Under the new law, individuals found guilty of breaching foreign investment rules will face penalties of A$127,500 or three years imprisonment. A higher A$637,500 fine will apply to companies. Third parties who assist investors in breaching the rules will face fines of A$42,500 for individuals and A$212,500 for firms.

"What we want to do is to maximise the opportunities for Australians to buy a home at the best possible price," Abbott said. "We want people to be absolutely confident that local people are getting a fair go."

Bloomberg, Reuters


 
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