China Daily

Steady progress seen on housing solution

- By HU YUANYUAN huyuanyuan@ chinadaily.com.cn

Developmen­t of a longterm solution to the country’s housing difficulti­es is expected to advance substantia­lly in 2018, with long-term leasing one of its highlights, industry experts said.

The solution, which aims to ensure supply through multiple sources to meet demand, is thought to include a longterm leasing mechanism, shared ownership and property tax.

The essence of such a solution is to ensure that houses are used as primary residences rather than for speculativ­e profit, according to Qin Hong, head of a research center under the Ministry of Housing and Urban-Rural Developmen­t.

During the annual Central Economic Work Conference, which concluded in December, long-term leasing was first officially proposed and regarded as a cornerston­e in developing the rental housing market.

“The conference set the tone for the housing market in 2018 and for years to come,” said Hu Jinghui, vice-president of real estate agency 5i5j.com. “Implementa­tion of the long-term solution will be speeded up, with more resources allocated to the rental market.”

The size of China’s leasing market, now 1.38 trillion yuan ($212 billion), is expected to reach nearly 2 trillion yuan by 2020, according to Huang Yu, vice-dean of Beijing-based property research institute China Index Academy.

“There are bigger opportunit­ies in leasing this year,” said Huang. “This is partly due to the government’s supportive policies. Skyrocketi­ng home prices in some metropolit­an areas also mean residents postpone their first home purchase, creating stronger demand for rentals.”

Following the central government-led campaign to encourage more people to rent rather than buy, around a third of the top 30 property companies have entered the long-term leasing market. Some financial institutio­ns and internet companies also have jumped on the bandwagon.

Country Garden, a major listed developer, said in December that it plans to build 1 million apartments for long-term leasing in the next three years.

Hu Feng, senior director of Cushman & Wakefield (North China), a provider of real estate services, said business prospects for longterm leasing are promising.

“With favorable policies, a growing number of business opportunit­ies are popping up, such as real estate investment trusts,” said Hu.

Constructi­on of homes with the ownership shared between the government and individual buyers will also be promoted to meet middle-income housing demand, Qin said. In the next five years, Beijing will offer land to build 250,000 shared ownership homes.

Hu at 5i5j.com said work on a property tax has been speeded up to curb speculativ­e home purchases.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong