The State Council, China's cabinet, has decided to significantly
tighten the rules regarding mortgage down payments and housing
transactions, in a bid to cool down the country's over-heated
property sector.
According to a statement issued by the State Council yesterday,
as of June 1 the minimum down payment for a new apartment larger
than 90 square meters will be raised from 20 percent to 30
percent.
The ratio for an apartment smaller than 90 square metres will
remain unchanged at 20 percent, to cater to "the needs of middle-
and low-income groups," the statement said.
In another important move, a transaction tax will be imposed on
people attempting to resell their properties within five years of
purchase. The current period is two years. The tax rate will stay
unchanged at 5.5 percent of the sale value.
The move, also effective June 1, is aimed at "curbing
speculative and investment-oriented housing demand," according to
the statement.
"The transaction tax will certainly do something to combat
investment-oriented housing demand, although it will depend on how
effectively the new rules are enforced," said Wang Deyong, a
real-estate industry analyst with CITIC Securities.
"This tax on sales of second-hand houses, together with other
measures in the State Council statement, are likely to have an
impact on the market, but it won't be dramatic," said Richard Wang,
associate director of Consultancy and Research Department with
global real-estate advisor DTZ's Beijing office.
However, for high-income earners the down payment increase may
not be a major deterrent.
"It will have little, if any, impact on my home-buying plan,"
said Zhao Guocheng, 28, an Internet service company employee in
Beijing.
"If it were raised to 50 percent, as was rumoured one week ago,
then I would have to rethink my purchase plan. Perhaps I would have
to work hard for many more years to buy a flat," said Zhao.
Earlier, in an executive meeting chaired by Premier Wen Jiabao
on May 17, the State Council vowed to use a mix of tax, credit and
land policies for this purpose.
The State Administration of Taxation also issued a directive on
May 19 reiterating its call on local governments to impose a 20
percent capital-gain tax on sales of second-hand property, which
requires sellers to pay 20 percent of the profit they make from
housing sales as tax.
Property prices in China's major cities have soared in recent
years, raising concerns about an overheated market.
In the first quarter this year housing prices jumped 15 percent
in Beijing and 35 percent in Shenzhen, a booming city in Guangdong
Province.
The latest moves, which also cover bank lending, are "the most
detailed policies that the government has ever taken towards the
housing market," said an executive with a Beijing-based property
developer, who refused to be named,
"It may make life harder for the less competitive and smaller
developers, but it will not have much impact on the strong and
competitive ones," he added.
The statement also called for strengthened supervision on land
used for housing developments.
A policy has been issued to require that developers of land
slated for development be charged a high "idle land fee" if it
remains unused for one year, while rights will be revoked if it
remains unused for 2 years.
The State Council paper also asked local governments to make 70
percent of its annual land supply available for the development of
low-cost housing.
"The land supply policy may be the most effective way to rein in
surging property prices," said DTZ's Wang.
"The land market should be better regulated. In some places, the
land auction floor price offered by local governments is too high,
which will inevitably push up prices," he said.
(China Daily May 30, 2006)