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    Property market collapse ruled out

    By Hu Yuanyuan (China Daily)

    Updated: 2016-03-16 02:36:13

    8.03K

    Stabilizing home prices in first-tier cities and some second-tier cities called 'primary task'

    Property market collapse ruled out

    Minister of Housing and Urban-Rural Development Chen Zhenggao (center) addresses a news conference on Tuesday during the NPC annual session. WANG ZHUANGFEI / CHINA DAILY

    China's real estate market will not collapse as happened in Japan two decades ago, because the situations of the two countries are very different, Minister of Housing and Urban-Rural Development Chen Zhenggao said on Tuesday.

    "It is not appropriate to compare the real estate market in China with that of Japan in the 1990s, as the two countries are in different stages of economic development and urbanization. We also have different macro policies to control the situation," Chen said at a news conference.

    Chen's remarks came amid growing concern over the potential risks in China's real estate sector as home prices in Beijing, Shanghai and Shenzhen have surged by 20 to 30 percent since the Lunar New Year. In Shenzhen, prices have increased by 72 percent over the past 12 months, according to the Shenzhen Urban Planning, Land and Resources Commission.

    The supply-demand imbalance and the easing of monetary policy are regarded as major reasons for the latest price surges in big cities.

    The soaring prices have led to worries that China may repeat what happened in the 1990s in Japan, where the burst of the real estate bubble resulted in an economic recession for almost 20 years.

    "Stabilizing home prices in first-tier cities and some second-tier cities is one of our primary tasks. We will take timely, relevant measures, including increasing the supply of land and small and medium-sized apartments, using different policies and cracking down on illegal behavior to push up prices," said Chen.

    According to Li Daokui, a political adviser and an economics professor at Tsinghua University, there is no bubble in the first-tier cities' property market, based on the price-to-rent ratio. More supply is needed to ease price increases in such cities, Li said.

    Yan Yuejin, director of the Shanghai E-House Real Estate Research Center, said the market frenzy in first-tier cities' real estate sector, though a bit unexpected, was fundamentally triggered by the imbalance of supply and demand.

    "The international experience sometimes is not applicable to China. For instance, China has more than 3,000 cities, which Japan doesn't have. The situation in China's real estate sector is much more complicated than that in Japan," said Yan.

    Home prices probably will increase further in the long run, Yan said.

    Chen said he was very confident in the future development of China's real estate sector, due to the country's solid economic growth and the potential for urbanization.

    China's GDP is expected to grow by 6.5 to 7 percent this year, still much faster than the growth of most economies across the world. The urbanization rate, now at 56.1 percent, will reach 60 percent by the end of the 13th Five-Year Plan (2016-20), indicating strong market demand for housing in the years ahead, he added.

    Du Juan contributed to this story.

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