China has urged local governments to reserve at least 70 percent
of the land designated for residential construction for low-rent
units or smaller, cheaper commercial homes.
Local governments should fully implement the state's
macro-control policies and accelerate the establishment of a
housing security system, said Qi Ji, Vice Minister of Construction,
at a meeting on Wednesday in Qingdao City, in east China's Shandong
Province.
He stressed that land used to build houses for low-income
families, whether low-rent units or low-cost commercial flats with
size and price ceilings, should comprise at least 70 percent of the
total land used for residential construction in the next two
years.
Housing price inflation in China hit a new monthly high of 9.5
percent in October, 0.6 percentage point higher than in September,
despite government efforts to cool the boom.
The government has been trying to curb soaring real estate
prices and guarantee adequate housing for the needy. Regulators
have raised interest rates, ordered developers to build more small,
low-cost homes and imposed curbs on the purchase of second homes
and foreign investment in real estate.
In August, the Ministry of Construction urged local governments
to use 10 percent of the profits from land rentals and sales to
help the millions who cannot afford commercial housing.
The government has set up a system to provide low-rent houses
for urban families whose living space is less than 10 square meters
per person.
(Xinhua News Agency November 22, 2007)