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In the towns, ownership is the way

[photopress:Chinahouse_1.jpg,full,alignright]According to the Ministry of Construction, reported by Chinese news agency Xinhua, ‘four out of five of China’s urbanites own their own residences and 94 per cent own some form of accommodation.’

As China’s social housing system develops, a growing number of people, especially in urban areas, will purchase their own houses with a combination of funds they accumulate themselves, the equivalent amount paid by their work units for housing, and bank loans. The latest statistics from the People’s Bank of China show that housing loans issued by China’s commercial banks in 2001 were 32.55 times those in 1997.

Housing loans issued by domestic financial institutions totalled 663 billion yuan (US$80 billion) by the end of June. Housing loans have become a critical part of the credit consumption of the Chinese people.

The central government began to reform the housing system back in the mid-1980s by selling luxury houses at market prices, by providing middle-income families with cheaper housing, and by accommodating low-income residents in low-rent apartments.

Developers of affordable housing can enjoy 21 tax-reduction and exemption programmes if they keep their profit margins below 3 per cent.
Source: Asia Market Research.

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