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BEIJING, April 23 (Xinhuanet) -- Vacant space in
China's commercial real estate sector was up 5.3 per cent year-on-year during
the first quarter of this year to 90.08 million square metres, the National
Bureau of Statistics said yesterday.
"Although the growth rate slowed from the same period last year, it was still much faster than the
average growth rate of 2.2 per cent for 2003," the bureau said in a statement.
The amount of floor space which went unsold for more
than three years stood at 11.38 million square metres, accounting for 12.6 per
cent of the total, it said.
Economists attributed increasing vacant space to real
estate investment growing too fast, as well as high prices.
During the January-March period, total investment in
commercial real estate reached 182 billion yuan (US$21.9 billion), an increase
of 41.4 per cent compared with a year ago.
Investment in residential homes rose 35.9 per cent to
120.3 billion yuan (US$14.5 billion), while investment in office space rose 68
per cent to 9.4 billion yuan (US$1.1 billion).
A total of 36.81 million square metres of commercial
real estate were built during the period, an increase of 45.8 per cent.
But higher prices have kept many people out of the
market.
The average price for commercial real estate was
2,677 yuan (US$322.5) per square metre, an increase of 6.7 per cent, while the
average price for residential real estate rose 6.5 per cent to 2,481 yuan
(US$298.9) per square metre.
Commercial residential housing in Shanghai, East
China, witnessed a year-on-year increase of about 30 per cent during the first
quarter, the fastest growth among the country's 35 major cities.
The National Development and Reform Commission, which
has closely monitored housing prices in the 35 cities, said earlier housing
prices in 10 cities had gone up by at least 10 per cent during the January-March
period.
But prices in Beijing, well-known for being
comparatively expensive, remained stable with only a 1.8 per cent year-on-year
increase during the same period.
In Shanghai, the government has already taken
measures to curb rapid price increases, according to Cai Yutian, director of the
Shanghai Administration of Housing, Land and Resources.
He said Shanghai will learn from Hong Kong's
experience in controlling the real estate market, with the government
intervening in and limiting the trade of commercial real estate before owners
obtain housing permits.
As China's economic powerhouse, Shanghai has observed
soaring housing prices in recent years.
Its commercial housing prices topped 5,118 yuan
(US$617) per square metre last year, about 24.2 per cent or 1,000 yuan
(US$120.5) up from the previous year.
Rising prices across the country sparked interest
among economists and officials who thought it might cause problems for the
healthy development of the industry and the country's economy as a whole.
Yang Shen, chairman of the China Real Estate
Association, said tougher measures should be put in place to ward off risks in
China's bullish real estate sector despite housing demand remaining strong.
The central bank has already taken a series of
measures to cool down the industry, said Wang Zhao, a researcher with the
Development Research Centre.
The central bank is now requiring commercial banks to
limit lending to real estate developers, beef up credit management and increase
the downpayment for buyers of second homes and luxury homes.
Analysts from real estate consultancy firm Jones Lang
Lasalle said the new policy mainly targets poor-quality and low-credit real
estate developers as well as the high-end housing market segment.
They point to the large number of non-performing
loans and high luxury housing vacancy as responsible for triggering the price
hike.
Li Yang, a senior economist with the Chinese Academy
of Social Sciences, said the new policy is aimed at helping more people buy
homes suited to their tastes and budgets.
New monetary policy usually focuses on the interests
of ordinary people first rather than real estate developers, he said.
(China Daily)
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