BEIJING, May 14 (Xinhua) -- China's Ministry of Land
and Resources has announced a 30-percent cut in the minimum purchase price of
land for industrial use in order to boost investment.
However, the statement on the ministry website
Wednesday failed to say when the cut would take effect.
The move would "further implement the government's
policy of boosting domestic demand and push forward steady and rapid economic
development," said the statement.
The new rule will apply to investments that make
intense use of land and those involving the processing of agricultural,
forestry, animal husbandry and aquatic products.
The ministry set minimum prices for industrial land
use in January 2007 to curb the selling of cheap land-use rights for industrial
use to attract investment and seek a higher GDP growth. The price ranged from 60
yuan (8.77 U.S. dollars) per square meter in some counties in northwestern
Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region to 840 yuan per square meter in the suburbs of
Shanghai, China's largest metropolis.
Wang Xiaoying, researcher of the Chinese Academy of
Social Sciences, told Xinhua Thursday, industrial investment had contracted
because of the economic slowdown, which dragged down the demand for industrial
land.
The national average industrial land price was 721
yuan per square meter in the first quarter, down 1.08 percent from the fourth
quarter of last year, and down 1.1 percent year on year, according to the
ministry.
Zou Xiaoyun, deputy chief engineer of the China Land Surveying and Planning, said the new rule would help reduce cost for enterprises, and stimulate them to expand investment, especially for new projects.
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