China announced late yesterday an array of policies, including tax exemption
and mortgage deposits reduction, to boost the falling real estate sector amid
the global economic downturn.
The People's Bank of China, the central bank, said in a website circular late
on Wednesday that the down payment for an initial purchase of housing with a
floor space of more than 90 square meters for self use could not be less than 20
percent. Previously, the figure was 30 percent.
The new practice will take effect Oct. 27.
The interest rates on a mortgage for first time home buyers would be cut by
0.27 percentage points to boost domestic consumption. The floor for interest
rates would be lowered to 70 percent of the central bank's benchmark rate, the
central bank said.
It said the adjustment was made to offset the negative impact brought about
by the widespread global financial crisis and to stimulate domestic consumption
amid the world economic slowdown.
The new policy demonstrated the central government's determination to
stabilize the property market and to maintain economic growth, said Hua Wei, a
professor with the Shanghai-based Fudan University.
The tax incentive can not be deemed as only to stimulate the sector of real
estate, it is also part of the macro economic policy adjustment, according to
Bai Jingming, deputy director of the Fiscal Science Research Institute of the
Ministry of Finance.
China's economic growth slowed down to 9.9 percent in the first three
quarters as the spreading credit crisis dampened foreign demand for Chinese
goods.
The stability of the property sector is significant for the national economy
as the sector contributes a quarter of domestic fixed asset investment.
The sector, once overheated, plunged into recession as the government had
limited bank loans for property developers in a move to restrain the runaway
housing prices.
Property prices in major Chinese cities increased 3.5 percent in September
from a year ago, the slowest pace in more than three years.
People's tendency to buy houses tumbled to 10-year low. Insiders said the
hefty transaction costs did not restrain the property speculative activities,
but refrain consumers from buying.
To facilitate house purchase for mid-and-low income families, the Ministry of
Finance said that starting from Nov. 1, the stamp tax on property purchase and
the value-added tax of land on property sales would be lifted. The contract tax
would be reduced to 1 percent on purchase of the first unit of housing with a
floor space of no more than 90 square meters.
The fiscal measures were unveiled shortly after the interest rate cuts, which
showed the government's resolution to sort out the current problem, Hua said.
Bai Jingming said the new policy would coordinated with the loosening
monetary policy to help stabilize the property market and the national economy.
The ministry said the construction of the low-rental housing would be
accelerated and the subsidies for low-income families would be boosted. Living
allowance for the people affected by the Sichuan earthquake would also be
increased.
Those moves aimed to ensure the basic living of the low-income households and
raise people's expectation for the economy. It also intended to promote the
healthy and stable development of the economy by fueling domestic consumption,
the ministry said on its website.
China has cut interest rates twice in one month, and loosened the lending
restrictions to prevent the world's fourth largest economy from sliding.
It also raised the export rebates to boost export, which is the driving force
of the national economy, as the trade surplus shrank 2.6 percent in the first
three quarters from a year ago sapped by weakening foreign demand.