Property prices in 70 large and medium-sized Chinese cities increased by 5.6
percent year on year in April, according to a poll released Thursday by the
National Development and Reform Commission and the National Bureau of
Statistics.
The prices of new residential houses gained 6.4 percent over the same period
of 2005, which is 0.5 percentage points higher than in March.
The prices of government-subsided houses rose by 5.8 percent, less expensive
homes by 5.5 percent and luxury houses jumped 8.0 percent.
Hohhot, capital of Inner Mongolia region in north China, reported the biggest
gain in housing prices at 14.9 percent.
It was followed by Shenzhen, of Guangdong Province in south China, at 13.6
percent, and Dalian, a coastal city in northeast Liaoning Province, at 11.1
percent.
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 Skyscrapers standing on the shore of Huangpu
River in East China's metropolis of Shanghai,Property prices in 70 large
and medium-sized Chinese cities increased by 5.6 percent year on year in
April, according to a poll released Thursday by the National Development
and Reform Commission and the National Bureau of Statistics.
[newsphoto]
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Shanghai is the only city where the prices of residential houses dropped. Its
housing prices declined by 6.2 percent year on year.
The prices of previously owned residential houses rallied by 5.8 percent in
April. Dalian, Shenzhen, Hohhot and Beijing has the biggest gains.
The prices of non-residential houses rose by 3.9 percent year on year in
April, with the price of office space increasing by 4.1 percent, commercial
properties by 4.9 percent and industrial warehousing by 1.8 percent.
Housing prices in major Chinese cities have continued to soar in the first
few months of 2006, in defiance of the central government's year-long effort to
rein in the market.
In the face of increasingly bitter public outcry, the government has ordered
local governments to increase the supply of affordable housing and threatened to
crackdown on speculators and others who may be manipulating the
market.
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