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My Take | A small Zhejiang city has a big idea for China’s property market, but broader reform will take time

  • The rural town of Lishui is allowing individuals to participate in a land auction in an experiment that has captured the attention of investors
  • The appetite from buyers may be low, but any signs of success could signal to other cities a new model for urban land management

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An aerial view of residential buildings under construction by Chinese real estate developer Vanke in Hangzhou, in eastern China’s Zhejiang province, on March 15, 2024. Photo: AFP

The city of Lishui, in China’s eastern Zhejiang province, is not the type of place that would normally have much relevance in the country’s vast property market. But a singular experiment involving selling land directly to individuals has now captured the attention of investors.

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Lishui is set to auction off a plot of land the size of a football pitch – a relatively small parcel with huge implications. The auction is considered a breakthrough for China’s land system in which municipal authorities hitherto exclusively sold to property developers. Individuals are barred from directly buying urban land for residential development.

This system, which was borrowed from British rule over Hong Kong, has been the engine of China’s urbanisation in the recent decades. Under constitutional law that makes all urban land collectively owned by the public, municipal authorities are allowed to auction land use rights of up to 70 years to developers. Revenues from these auctions are generally spent in a rush to finance public projects, urban gentrification and utilities, which in turn can create more saleable land or push up land prices in future auctions.

This has been the core of urban “development” for many city governments in the last two decades, in which cities operate as land-centred commercial enterprises. The monetisation of land in China – through local authorities, developers, bankers and households – is an involved process that has fundamentally changed the country’s landscape.

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This process, however, has hit a wall in many places in a sign that the country’s debt-driven development has gone too far. Local governments have been horrified to find that revenues from land auctions are drying up, as the country’s developers have increasingly become at risk of or are already in default.

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