The Chinese government will extend the low-rent
housing system to cover medium-and low-income families nationwide
this year, Minister of Construction Wang Guangtao announced
Tuesday.
The Chinese government will extend the low-rent
housing system to cover medium-and low-income families nationwide
this year, Minister of Construction Wang Guangtao announced
Tuesday.
All cities and counties will come under the system’s
aegis by the end of 2007, Wang said at the national construction
work conference.
His announcement comes amid government efforts to curb
runaway housing prices although no exact figures were given about
the low-rent houses to be built this year.
Low-income families have only limited access to
affordable housing due to the over-reliance by local governments on
the highly lucrative property industry for fiscal revenue, he
said.
A report released by the China Society for Urban
Studies revealed that China has an alarming 1.56 million urban
families with no access to adequate affordable housing, many of
whom are living in overcrowded and dilapidated homes.
He urged developers to allocate 70 percent of new
housing to small-and medium-sized homes under 90 square meters,
calling it one of 2007’s top priorities.
All new houses should further be built following
environmental and energy standards to ensure optimum water usage
and waste disposal efficiency, he said.
Low-rent apartments are essential to China's housing
security system. They are either built or commissioned by the
government and provided to poor urban families at discounted
rents.
The latest official figures show that the mechanism
has so far covered 291 cities at or above prefecture level as of
Dec. 20, 2006.
Despite curbing efforts, prices for new homes in 70
large and medium-sized cities in China grew 6.3 percent in December
last year from 2005.
(Xinhua News Agency January 25, 2007)
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