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As the government promoted a plan to increase the official price of apartments and single-family homes by up to 90% of the market price, it increased the property tax burden on homeowners. When YTN asked Real Meter for their opinion on the plan to make the published price, about half of them said they disagreed. Reporter Gye Hoon-hee reports. Last week, the government and ruling party said they were considering a plan to make listed property prices come true. It means that the published price, which is only 50-70% of the current market price, will rise to a maximum of 90% for the next 10 years. When the party’s final proposal is announced, it will be applied to the published price for next year and the burden of holding tax will increase. YTN commissioned Real Meter to ask the pros and cons of realizing the published real estate price. It turns out that about half do not agree. 51.2% of those surveyed said ‘I disagree’, which was approximately 10% more points than those who answered ‘I agree’. In addition, 3 out of 10 showed strong denial, saying they did not agree with the plan to finalize the published price. By region, both the metropolitan area and the non-metropolitan area responded predominantly that “I do not agree”. Opinions differed by type of home ownership, but self-employed residents reacted more negatively to the realization of the quoted price, with half of the respondents living in cheonsei saying they disagreed. The tenants of the monthly rent and the sageul rent faced strong pros and cons. The answers differ according to ideological orientation. 68.4% of respondents who said they were conservative said they disagreed, but 62.5% of those who said they were making progress said they agreed and opposed each other. On the 30th of last month, the survey was conducted with 500 men and women 18 years of age or older throughout the country, wirelessly and by cable, and the sampling error is ± 4.4% from the confidence level of 95%. YTN Kye Hoon-hee[[email protected]]it is.