Computers to clean up land lease problems
26/2/2004 11:32
Shanghai Daily news
Shanghai housing authorities began using a new computer bidding system
yesterday to improve transparency in the leasing of city land. The city
announced plans yesterday to lease out 20 plots of land in five districts using
the computer system, which replaces city officials in analyzing bidding prices
and development plans. The Shanghai Housing and Land Administrative Bureau
said yesterday that the results and criteria used to decide which developer gets
to lease a plot will be published on the bureau's Website three days after the
bidding is completed. Developed by the Shanghai Information Technology
Development Commission, the new system also records and analyzes data from land
transactions, including prices and volumes. The computer bidding system is
expected to reduce personal intervention and mistakes, the bureau said. In the
past, critics have claimed that developers used their close relationships with
city officials to lease land at cheap prices. One of the city's biggest
developers has been under investigation since last summer over questionable
loans and inside dealing. Developers, particularly smaller companies, applaud
the new system. "Previously, the criteria used to evaluate developers' plans
were not published," said Ma Zhijiu, a manager with Shanghai Sitico Real Estate
Co Ltd. "That disappointed the bidders." Having that information published
online will help small companies compete against government-backed developers,
said Ma. Some analysts think the new policy will help bring down housing
prices in the city. Yin Kunhua, a professor at Shanghai University of Finance
and Economics, said some bidders in the past had offered irrationally high
prices to win a land leasing auction because it was the only way they knew how
to compete. "Overly high bidding prices will eventually drive up the housing
prices and raise their management risks," Yin said. Housing prices have been
on the rise in Shanghai for the past three years. To keep prices down, the
city plans to lease out 2,500 hectares of land this year. In 2003, the city
leased 1,900 hectares of land for development. The city is also pushing real
estate companies to start developing land they have already leased but are
sitting on until prices rise. Cai Yutian, director of the Shanghai Housing
and Land Administrative Bureau, said developers currently hold 6,000 hectares of
land in reserve in Shanghai. "As the city's housing prices keep surging,
some developers tend to hold the land in a bid to gain more," Cai said. "We will
introduce policies to push them to start construction." Developers can be
fined up to 20 percent of the price they paid to lease land if it sits idle for
more than one year.
|