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 Longer-term solutions required  By You Nuo (China Daily)  Updated: 2006-06-05 09:13  But these are all policies to bring about short-term assistance. Housing 
problems, especially in large cities like Beijing and Shanghai, have some 
deeper-level significance and require policies featuring greater foresight and 
long-term benefits.
  First of all, the current attempt to slow down real 
estate investment cannot be, as some commentators in the Chinese-language press 
seem to suggest, a war between the government  acting on behalf of the 
public interest  and unruly property developers.
  Those merchants may 
not be particularly attractive personalities. Nor does their industry have much 
to boast about in technological progress or managerial expertise.
  But 
they are the ones that happen to operate in a market that generates more 
economic growth and consumer spending than many other things can do  
especially at the stage when every Chinese household is looking for ways to 
improve its housing conditions.
  It is not right, of course, for property 
developers to hijack public policies because of their importance  by doing 
whatever brings them the highest returns. But those who make policies should 
also do more to define the role of the business.
  However, for quite 
long  and longer than the time that officials have been busy with such 
details as the size of houses and their maximum prices  some more important 
questions have remained unanswered. 
  Should, for instance, Chinese cities 
have a distinctive division between rich people's living quarters and those 
belonging to the rest of society? Some developers said yes. While their critics, 
arguing from a moralistic standpoint, said no. 
  But if in reality, there 
are customers who aspire for larger units, whether for investment or for their 
own use, where should those houses be? Should they occupy locations best 
equipped with public facilities, which I tend to think belong to average 
homeowners, or should they be built in some distant spots? 
  At the same 
time, should cities like Beijing and Shanghai consider moving some of their 
cities' functions to new cities in nearby provinces? Why should they, for 
instance, keep so many crammed university campuses in their cities? After all, 
they have little room to develop. 
  Why must every corporation keep its 
headquarters, along with a whole army of supporting staff, in a major city in 
order to claim national importance? 
  Why, in the era of the Internet and 
mass communications, must every media organization keep its general office in 
downtown to advertise its presence? 
  Again, there is the question I 
raised one year ago when I started this column, why would any rational person 
want to work in Beijing's central business district? The traffic jam has never 
relaxed a bit since I worked there for an investment firm in 2000. No 
improvement in six years, what development is that?
 
 
   (For more biz stories, please visit Industry Updates)  
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