Chandigarh slashes commercial collector rates by 10%
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Tribune News Service
Chandigarh, April 5
To give a boost to the realty sector, which has suffered a setback due to Covid-19, the UT Administration has decided to slash the collector rates to bring them on a par with two neighbouring satellite cities — Panchkula and Mohali.
Another reason behind the decision is the realisation that “exorbitant prices” of commercial properties were a deterrent to new buyers, who were beginning to prefer Mohali and Panchkula over Chandigarh. The decision to revise the collector rates in the UT was taken at a meeting, chaired by Deputy Commissioner Mandip Singh Brar.
“The collector rates have been proposed on the basis of sale deeds registered in the Sub-Registrar Office as well as the survey of market and villages,” the Deputy Commissioner said, adding that the new rates would be made applicable from April 12.
Decreasing the collector rates of commercial industrial properties was the need of the hour as it would help in reviving the property market, said Charanjiv Singh, president, Chandigarh Beopar Mandal. He appealed to the Administration to make the commercial property freehold so that people could buy it as per their need and the authorities could earn revenue from it.
The reduction in the collector rates in industrial and commercial properties was a long-pending demand, said Naveen Manglani, president, Chamber of Chandigarh Industries. “The prevailing market rates are at least 20 per cent to 25 per cent less than the prevailing collector rates,” he said. “Once the leasehold industrial plots are converted to freehold, more deals will take place and more revenue will be generated. As a result, more industry/businesses will flourish in the Chandigarh industrial area,” he said.
Kamaljit Singh Panchhi, chairman, Property Consultants Association, said the authorities should have also reduced the collector rates of residential properties to boost the sale of houses, as residential properties were still out of reach of the needy people.
The collector rates in the UT were higher than Mohali and Panchkula, he said, and demanded that the rates should be reduced by at least 40 per cent to boost the sale and purchase of properties.