No plan to ease property curbs in Beijing
Updated: 2014-07-28 20:39
By Yao Jing
|
||||||||
Beijing is not planning to ease its restrictions on acquiring residential properties as many local governments are trying to boost the market through eliminating related policies.
"Beijing will not announce new measures in the real estate sector," Beijing Mayor Wang Anshun said during a meeting on Beijing's economic situation in the first half, quoted Beijing News.
The elimination of related rules will weaken the motivation to restructure and affect the sustainable development of the city, according to Wang.
In the first half of this year, the property sector accounted for 6 percent of the capital's total gross domestic product, a drop of 0.8 percentage point compared with the same period last year.
Meanwhile, Beijing's commercial buildings saw sales of 5.36 million square meters in floor area, a decline of 34.8 percent compared with the previous year.
Figures show that the city's economic growth is less dependent on the real estate industry.
"Still, we cannot underestimate the position of the real estate in the economy as the size of Beijing's property sector is very big," said Liu Yuanchun, assistant dean at the Renmin University of China School of Economics.
Among 49 cities that introduced property policies, more than 20 have lifted home purchase restrictions.
China speeds up drafting of property regulation
Developers placing bets on casinos overseas
Chinese are No 1 buyers of US residential property
Property developer uses helicopters and models for promotion
- Chinese naval vessels participate in RIMPAC drill
- Rose Li earns pageant title in Houston
- Harsher safety measures urged amid scandal
- Young ambassadors
- Wanxiang finds success in US
- The world in photos: July 21 - July 27
- Twin artists 'Os Gemeos' hold exhibition in Sao Paulo
- When did women begin to prefer slim look?
Most Viewed
Editor's Picks
Xi attends BRICS summit |
China helps fight international war on drugs |
Crackdown on terrorist attacks |
My China Story: Meeting the master |
Tongues tied around tatu-bola |
A market that's not such a hot property |
Today's Top News
Glitch delays visas for US-bound students
A musical spoof of the Clinton years
Good times beckon for Latin American ties
Investment from China to boom
US sets China solar dumping margins
iPhones' access to data faces scrutiny
Chinese have a crush on Harvard?
Scandal-hit China food firm withdraws products
US Weekly
Geared to go |
The place to be |