The Qingdao local government has vowed to exercise tougher
macrocontrol over the real estate sector to offer more affordable houses to
people.
The port city's move announced last weekend was a major policy reversal to
bring down property prices
after former Party chief Du Shicheng was sacked for
allegedly raising them to achieve faster GDP growth.
"The housing policy should be human-oriented. Market mechanism alone cannot
ensure a favorable house market for people in the low-income group. The
government, too, has to play its role to stabilize and control the property
prices," Qingdao mayor Xia Gen was quoted by China Business News as having said.
Local people and media welcomed Xia's remarks because it had long been felt
that property prices in the city were abnormally high when compared to the low
per capita income of its residents. And insiders had been alleging that Du had
orchestrated the hike in prices to boost the city's real estate sector to
achieve higher GDP growth.
Till Du was in office, property prices in this city in East China's
Shandong Province kept rising from about 2,000 yuan ($250) per square meter in
2000 to 6,288 yuan ($786) by the end of 2006, whereas its per capita income
stayed around 1,000 yuan.
"The Qingdao municipal government's latest move is a shift from its earlier
housing policy," a noted scholar was quoted as having told China Business News.
The city will invest 500 million yuan ($62.5 million) this year to build
about 3,000 apartments and rent it to residents who cannot afford to buy even
the cheapest houses, and grant about 80 million yuan ($10 million) in subsidy to
the poor to enable them to rent these houses. Also, it will build affordable
houses on about 860,000 square meters for nearly 6,700 families.
About 18 residential areas in the city's old areas and suburbs, too, will
be renovated to improve the living environment of residents.
To ensure that its plan is implemented fully, the municipal government has
ordered all its related bureaus to map out their monthly schedule, which would
be checked on a monthly basis.
Local real estate developer Li Na said the price rise had already slowed
down since December.
"But given that Qingdao is an important city and many home buyers from
other cities are flocking to it, it's unlikely that housing prices will see a
major downslide," Li said.