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Related: Property cooling measures
imminent
BEIJING, May 21 (Xinhua) -- China's new macro
measures are expected to curb soaring house prices and the increasing amount of
empty commercial buildings.
A State Council meeting last Wednesday announced six
major policies for China's real estate market, emphasizing that tight tax, loan
and land regulations would be put in place to restructure the real estate
industry.
The new measures show a shift in the government's
policy, said Dong Fan, dean of the real estate market researching center of
Beijing Normal University. He added that the new measures prove that control of
market demand and the increase of supply should be included in the government's
macro-control policy.
The measures are designed to adjust the housing
supply structure to provide less expensive apartments for low-income families.
The vacant area of China's commercial buildings had
surged 18.9 percent from last year to 122 million square meters by the end of
April this year, the National Bureau of Statistics reports.
The bureau said the vacant commercial residential
buildings amounts to 69.21 million square meters, up 15.9 percent from the same
period a year earlier.
Since China adopted macro-control over the real
estate market last year, the increasing investment in the sector and price hikes
were reined in initially. But a survey conducted by the Ministry of Construction
showed that in the first months of 2006 the problems had not been solved,
illustrated by rapid price rises in big cities, bad supply structure and vague
market rules, it said.
Insiders said the effectiveness of the six new
measures depends on whether the local government will implement them fully.
Local governments like Beijing and Shanghai are working out measures using the
six policies as their guide.
The public reacted quickly to the new measures. An
on-line survey showed that 77.48 percent would postpone their house-buying plans
until the market is clearer. Enditem |