A set of governmental measures to expose rampant illegal land acquisitions 
took effect today. 
 
 
   A 
 laborer works on scaffoldings at a construction site in Nanjing, China, 
 July 11, 2006. China on Monday released proposed rules to limit foreign 
 investment in real estate amid quickening efforts to cool off the surging 
 economy, an official news agency 
said. [Reuters] | 
The central government has required that commercial land should be bid and 
auctioned nationwide. Previously, several provinces and municipalities had 
employed such market-based practices.
The new regulations, released by the Ministry of Land and Resources, 
stipulated that all land for business, tourism, recreation, commercial property 
and other profitable purposes should be transferred through public bidding and 
auctions.
"The process and final results of bidding and auctions should also be made 
public," the ministry spokesman said yesterday. "Land transaction will be 
transparent and be monitored by the public."
However, market-based practices in China are still in an embryonic stage. In 
most regions, the government has transferred land through negotiation with 
investors, which led to rampant corruption. 
The ministry's statistics indicated that the government transferred 163,000 
hectares of land nationwide last year, but only 35 per cent of it was dealt 
through bidding and auctions. The ministry considered this an achievement, 
representing an increase from 14.5 per cent in 2002. 
However, the researchers blamed the ministry for its slow action in stepping 
up the regulations. 
"The government has regarded curbing fast land supply as a solution to stop 
frenzied investment for a long time, but the concrete measures came out so 
late," a researcher surnamed Lin with the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences 
told China Daily. 
The ministry's spokesman also acknowledged some irregularities in old 
practices of land transactions. For example, some local governments withheld 
information concerning the land, lay obstacles for some bidders and even use 
underhanded deals to transfer land.
"The problems have existed for several years, resulting in some negative 
effects," said Lin. 
Lin cited corruption, a growing landless population, overinvestment and a 
decline in the amount of arable land as already having challenged the central 
government due to lax land management. 
China had 122 million hectares of arable land last year, down from 130 
million hectares in 1996. According to the ministry, it needs at least 106.7 
million hectares of cultivated land to feed its theoretical peak population of 
1.6 billion in 2030. 
The central government has already realized the irregularities. Recently, it 
urged the establishment of nine land inspection bureaux nationwide to strengthen 
supervision of land acquisition. 
Premier Wen Jiabao expressed concerns last week that too much land has come 
to real-estate development, the transfer cost of land for industrial purposes is 
still low and illegal occupation is still rampant. 
"Much stricter measures must be employed to curb the 
trend," Wen said. 
Taxes proposed to ward off real estate crisis
A leading economist has proposed that the Chinese government collect property 
taxes and real estate transfer taxes to rein in speculative investment and ward 
off a possible financial crisis. 
Owners should pay an annual property tax according to the size of their homes 
and the government should collect transfer taxes to redistribute profits 
generated by rising home prices, said Lin Yifu, director of the China Economy 
Research Center of the Beijing University. 
Since the government had adopted macro-controls over the real estate market 
last year, increasing investment and price hikes had slowed slightly, but rising 
prices in some big cities, imbalance between supply and demand and poor market 
regulation remained. 
Property was still seen as a sound investment in some circles, while a 
combination of low interest rates and expectations of currency appreciation had 
sucked in overseas money to China's real estate sector. 
Lin told a seminar in Dalian, northeast China's Liaoning Province, that if 
speculative demand continued, property prices would surge beyond the reach of 
the vast majority of people and businesses, leading to a market bubble and 
financial crisis.
 
(China Daily 08/01/2006 page2)