Asia acts over fears of property bubble
Policymakers are worried that excessive exuberance could push property prices far above their real value, only to crash and bring down with them banks that lent money too freely and individuals who borrowed beyond their means.
"It is better to pre-empt a bubble than wait for it to get serious and have to take more drastic measures," Singapore Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong said last month after the city-state took fresh measures against speculation.
Singapore was one of the countries hit by the 1997-1998 Asian financial meltdown. That crisis followed a property crash, leaving a blighted landscape of unfinished projects across the region and banks gasping for lifelines.
Problems in the US housing market had set off the devastating financial firestorm that swept across the world in late 2008 and lasted well into 2009.
While Asia is now leading the global economic recovery, officials are determined to avert another crisis.
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