Realty glut not a major concern for big cities
Updated: 2016-03-02 07:37
By LI ZHANJUN(China Daily)
|
|||||||||
The more than 300 third-tier cities and 2,000 fourth-tier cities or counties, characterized by less advanced industrial development, limited inflow of non-local people and relatively weak demand for commercial housing, need not worry too much about their housing inventory. The supply glut that has plagued many of them is only temporary, because the actual demand has been rising(about 5 to 8 percent) in recent years, not the other way round.
What drove a slew of property developers to invest in the less-developed cities has a lot to do with the real estate policies aimed at lowering the prices of high-end housing in major cities, and some local governments' generosity in offering land for real estate development. The oversupply should not last too long with more suburban residents moving into bigger cities-mostly third- and fourth-tier cities-considering their afford ability and other factors.
The real dangers are in major cities, where land is becoming increasingly scarce, property prices are escalating, demand for low-cost housing is high and real estate financing remains unregulated.
Of the four first-tier cities, Guangzhou has seen the mildest change in housing prices, while Shenzhen, although known for a drastic increase in prices of new homes, actually lags behind many smaller cities in terms of the amounts involved in transactions. Local residents have long been subjected to certain restrictions on buying homes, leading even to negative growth in terms of traded areas for some years.
Indeed, the average transaction amount is consistently increasing, which is basically normal with the total net increase of people reaching 5 million in Beijing and Shanghai during the first decade of the 21st century. And as the local land supply shrinks on a yearly basis, it costs more to buy an apartment in these cities.
Therefore, destocking housing inventory will not be a major concern for big cities, which should improve the local transportation systems to encourage more people to live in neighboring areas and further optimize land use.
The author is a researcher at the Shanghai-based E-house China Research and Development Institute.
Related Stories
To beat property glut, shared offices target new startups 2015-12-21 10:06
China's housing market recovery patchy 2016-02-27 14:05
Market booming as housing inventory drops in cities 2016-02-23 16:20
China raises deposit rate for housing provident fund 2016-02-17 21:40
Shenzhen needs to build more affordable housing to retain talent 2016-01-29 16:27
Today's Top News
Inspectors to cover all of military
Britons embrace 'Super Thursday' elections
Campaign spreads Chinese cooking in the UK
Trump to aim all guns at Hillary Clinton
Labour set to take London after bitter campaign
Labour candidate favourite for London mayor
Fossil footprints bring dinosaurs to life
Buffett optimistic on China's economic transition
Hot Topics
Lunar probe , China growth forecasts, Emission rules get tougher, China seen through 'colored lens', International board,
Editor's Picks
Sinopec opens new industrial platform |
Data point to Chinese economy shrugging off sluggishness and stabilizing |
China leads way on US adoptions |
Season of the locust eaters |
Humble bicyclist becomes Beijing nighthawk |
Chinese must adapt to UK 'study shock' |