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There may have been doubts there was a real estate bubble in China a few years ago, but it is obvious now. The average house price has tripled between 2005 and 2009. In some cities like Shanghai and Beijing, house prices increased by more than 40 percent in 2009 alone, and an additional 30 percent in 2010. The prices in both cities are now ridiculously high, while the rent to price ratio is much less than the deposit rate and the average family needs to work decades to afford a small apartment.
A real estate bubble is not only an economic problem, it is also a social disease that can do a great deal of harm and a ticking economic time bomb.
First, it causes unfairness. A rapid increase in house prices means the wealthy and those who were fortunate enough to buy apartments early can accumulate a fortune, while others cannot afford a property any more.
Second, it causes a prevalence of speculation and decline in entrepreneurship. Investing in real estate becomes so profitable that people indulge in speculation rather than manufacturing.
Third, the distorted house prices send the wrong signals, which cause the real estate industry to be inefficient and concentrate too many resources in the industry.
Finally, a real estate bubble increases living and production costs, which decrease consumption and cut cities' competitive advantages.
So what are the risks if a bubble bursts? Traditionally, when a real estate bubble bursts, the value of property decreases but not the level of debt, which may cause families and banks to go bankrupt and then cause financial crises. But what happened during real estate crises in other countries, such as the 2007 subprime crisis in the United States, is not likely to happen in China. Compared with US home owners, Chinese owners will not go bankrupt since they have higher down payment rates and do not consume more along with the increased value of their property. And banks will be safer too, since house prices have increased so fast that most loans were offered when the prices were still low.
Will the bursting of China's bubble affect local governments? Not really, in 2009 and 2010, in order to tackle the financial crisis, local governments had a heavy deficit, but according to data from the National Audit Office, at the end of 2010, the debts of local government financing platforms were 10.7 trillion yuan ($1.68 trillion) and the loans are basically guaranteed by the expected returns from land sales. The fiscal deficit and debt balance are reasonable and controllable proportions of the GDP.
In fact, the government can help burst the bubble slowly and control some of the risks.
After two years of regulations aimed at trying to cool the property market, some cities in China finally seem to be experiencing a slowdown. While some speculators and developers still expect efforts to curb the bubble to fail, many are seriously preparing to fight for their survival, as demand for apartments has been falling across the country following the government's ban on the purchases of a second property, increased minimum down payments, increased mortgage rates, and trial property taxes. At the same time, due to the tight monetary policy, developers are finding it difficult to access additional loans at a time when a sharp drop in real estate transactions means they have less working capital. Some realty brokerages across China have closed hundreds of offices, and some developers are starting to show signs of being bankrupt.




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