The fees to transfer the rights for land used for
industrial purposes will have minimums in a scheme announced
yesterday by the Ministry of Land and Resources (MLR).
The minimum fee scheme will take effect from next
Monday. The move came after the State Council released a statement
to strengthen the macro control of land management in
August.
The move was designed to curb investments involving
too much land for a rights transfer fee that was too low.
Industries were acquiring rights to more land than they could
immediately use.
MLR Vice Minister, Wang Shiyuan, said local
governments were driving down the transfer fees or even promising a
"zero fee" to attract investment. "Low land rights transfer fees
led to excessive expansion fuelling a large amount of unnecessary,
low-level construction," he said. "The vicious competition has
ruined a fair market environment resulting in a regional
imbalance."
Wang said that the practice also brought a huge loss
of State assets and damaged the interests of farmers who’d been
using the land. "The low land rights fees are often at the cost of
higher compensation fees that farmers should have received," he
said.
Although the State Council ordered local governments
to set up their own minimum use transfer fees in 2004 many didn’t
carry out the order or set a very low standard to lure investment,
Wang said.
By way of the new scheme the country's land is divided
into 15 classes that were divided according to socio-economic
status, the land condition and the average of the fees of the land
around it, said Liao Yonglin, director of the ministry's land
utilization department.
For example the minimum rate for first-class land,
such as the Huangpu District in Shanghai, is 840 yuan (US$107) per
square meter. Beijing's Chaoyang District is labeled second class
at 720 yuan (US$92) per square meter. And land rated 15th class
such as that in the western provinces of Gansu and Yunnan is only
60 yuan (US$7.67) per square meter.
However, each government is allowed to set a higher
standard according to its own situation. "Through the rights
transfer fee policy we hope to promote a better industrial
arrangement," Liao said. "For example, in some coastal areas where
land is scarce, some industries would not be suitable to these
areas."
Liao said that some governments in the region had
already started to select projects that benefited long-term
development. "Facing increased transfer fees enterprises will make
their own choices and governments will also readjust their
investment introduction policies," he said.
He added that a gradual trend would result in some
industries moving from the eastern part of the country to central
and western areas because land prices were so low.
Wang said that rather than leading to price increases
the new scheme would help stabilize housing prices. "The standard,
which aims to curb the development of too much land for industrial
use, will promote environmentally friendlier use of the land," he
said.
He also said the country was devising a plan to allot
30 percent of the income from land-use fees to help farmers who had
lost their ground.
(China Daily December 28,
2006)
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