Authorities should make every effort to ease skyrocketing house
prices in the interests of home-buyers, said a signed article in
the China Economic Times. An excerpt follows:
According to reports, Lin Haokun, director of the department of
land and resources in Guangdong Province, suggested that people wait
three years before they purchase a house if they are not in urgent
need of a new one. Lin said that current real estate prices are too
high and they would return to a normal level as more land is
supplied.
Lin's remark is a reminder of a number of citizens recently
calling on people not to purchase housing in protest against the
high prices. These common people cannot influence the real estate
market; instead they choose to save their money rather than
shouldering heavy mortgages.
But Lin's pledge, similar to Zou's call, is quite questionable
given that he is an official from the land and resources
department, whose major responsibility is related to the real
estate sector.
Maybe his remark could be interpreted as a sign of the
authorities' perplexity at skyrocketing house prices.
As a matter of fact, the real culprit behind the high prices is
the mismatch between demand and supply for housing most customers
could not afford the high-end or luxury houses that are fervently
promoted by developers.
Such a mismatch is also the result of the costly land that
developers obtain from the government, which makes it less
profitable to develop less expensive houses. The interest rate of
bank loans is also so "attractive" that many customers would not
think twice before applying for a mortgage.
Over-speculation is also responsible for rising house
prices.
So Lin and his fellow officials should take active steps to curb
the rise in house prices instead of issuing passive protests.
It is in the interests of home-buyers that authorities take the
necessary measures to bring down house prices so that consumers can
afford houses right now instead of waiting for three years, five
years or even a decade to buy a house.
(China Daily May 15, 2006)