Monday, December 31, 2007

Chinese language - Local officials undercut real estate controls

BIZCHINA / Weekly Roundup

Local officials undercut real estate controls

(Shanghai Daily)
Updated: 2007-01-17 10:47

Balky local governments greatly undermined the central government's macro
control policies in the real estate sector because they failed to fully
implement government directives, the Xinhua news agency reported on
January 7.

The central policies aimed at curbing property prices; they range from
encouraging the building of economically affordable housing to taxing
capital gains on property sales.

Related readings:
Truly low-price housing needed
Top research body warns of real estate bubble
Beijing house prices stoked by small group of rich people
Beijing house prices jump 42% in 3 years

Yet housing prices just kept soaring in many places.

According to the Wenhui Daily on January 8, in 70 large- and medium-sized
cities last year, the monthly rate of increase for the price of newly
built apartment buildings remained at no less than 5.8 percent in the
first 11 months.

The rapid increase was not only seen in the relatively affluent east
coast, but also in many not so developed cities, including Hohhot in
Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region, and Nanning in Guangxi Zhuang
Autonomous Region.

Although the central policies were well designed and targeted, without
cooperation from all local governments, most worked little, if at all, in
practice.

A typical example is the distortion of the capital gains tax policy
issued last July.

The new policy stipulated that from last August, all gains on individual
housing transactions are subject to a 20 percent individual income tax.

By this the government aims to discourage speculation in housing
transactions.

Yet, according to some local rules, if a seller fails to document the
property's original price, the tax bureau would tax the transactions at 3
percent of the total revenue from the sale.

The incentive is not to disclose the original cost.

In practice, therefore, many home sellers try not to provide
documentation on the original price of their property.

As a result, almost all the transactions were taxed on no more than 3
percent of the total revenue from the sale, thus undermining the policy.

In fact, the capital gains tax is nothing new. It was enacted as part of
China's 1994 personal income tax law, but many local governments have
never collected it.

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