Prevent housing price bubble
14/3/2005 15:45
Government departments at various levels should use regulative powers to curb
rising housing prices, said deputies attending sessions of the top advisory body
and legislature in Beijing yesterday. Zheng gongcheng, a deputy to the
National People's Congress, said confusion in the real estate market was due to
inadequate supervision to control "unreasonably high" housing
prices. "Developers have reaped exceedingly high profits in the current
chaotic real estate market," said Zheng, urging governments to develop more
low-rent, affordable housing projects to cater to the large group of low and
middle-income home buyers. Li yining, a member of the Chinese People's
Political Consultative Conference National Committee and an economist at Beijing
University, said: "Government departments should be held accountable for
providing needy and low-income earners with accommodation." The inability to
purchase a home or apartment in many cities has become the top concern of
wage-earners, whose salary increases rarely match soaring real estate
prices. In downtown Shanghai, the price of luxury residential housing can
reach 50,000 yuan (US$6,050) per square meter, the equivalent of the annual
income of a person with a decent job, said NPC deputy Yu Guosheng, from
Shanghai. According to the National Statistics Bureau, the average commercial
housing price stood at 2,777 yuan per square meter in the first nine months of
2004, a rise of 13 percent year-on-year. The figure shot up in 35 major
cities during the fourth quarter last year, or up 10.8 percent on a yearly
basis. A survey by the State Development and Reform Commission shows the
average housing price to income ratio is approaching 12:1 in cities such as
Nanjing, the capital of Jiangsu Province. The ratio should range between 4:1 and
6:1 in developing nations, according to the World Bank. Guo songhai, a
scholar at Shandong Economic College said: "Houses are special
commodities. They should not be speculated like stocks and other virtual
products."
Xinhua
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