“Several factors were identified as contributors to the 2014 real estate growth, including the introduction of building material subsidies for eligible recipients, enhanced financing flexibility offered by commercial banks, an increase in housing applications exceeding 109,000 and the establishment of a Kuwaiti jointstock company tasked with the construction and operation of power and water desalination facilities, among other elements,” he added. He underscored the adverse impact of the COVID-19 crisis on the domestic real estate market, leading to a decline in real estate transactions in 2019 and 2020. “These reductions ranged from two to 39.5 percent, reducing total transactions to KD2.499 billion. Subsequently, trading activity rebounded to the KD4 billion range in 2021, reflecting a 63.42 percent increase. Residential properties comprised the majority of transactions at 72.4 percent, while investment properties contracted to 19.1 percent,” he concluded.