China's home price growth
rate will probably slow down to less than 5 percent this year after
its wild run since 2004, says the Blue Book of Real Estate
2007.
"Stabilizing the home price is still the fundamental
part of the 2007 macro-controlling measures, and containing the
home price rise is an important criterion of gauging the
effectiveness of macro-control," says the report, which has been
published by Social Sciences Academic Press for the past four
years.
The central government's intensive cooling down
measures were effective last year, the report has said.
Last year, the average property price rise in 70 major
cities was 5.5 percent year-on-year, down 2.1 percentage points
from a year earlier, even though a few cities like Beijing and
Shenzhen saw a double-digit growth.
The continuous price rise would prompt the government
to adopt more detailed policies aimed especially at lowering the
price, says the report that was published last week.
The government has already stressed the importance of
building more affordable houses with its help.
As part of the policy, more economy and low-rent
houses, and those with price ceilings, will be built with
government subsidy this year to provide shelter to low-income
families.
"A sound social security system of houses has not yet
been set up. It is a serious problem and must be solved by our
government," former vice minister of construction Yang Shen has
said.
(China Daily May 2,
2007)
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