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THE world’s most populous country is planning to improve
housing for medium and low-income families in its cities and
towns, where many families still live in cramped conditions.
China built many apartment buildings in the last decade, but
urban living conditions still lagged behind those in developed
countries, Vice Minister of Construction Liu Zhifeng told an
International Conference on Financing Social Housing, which
opened Tuesday in Baotou City, North China’s Inner Mongolia
Autonomous Region. Many Chinese, who once experienced grave
housing shortages, now find their rooms shabby and
overshadowed by rapidly erected luxury apartments and villas
built for the minority of affluent people over the past 20
years. Nationwide there are 150 million square meters of old
or unsafe housing awaiting renovation, and 1.56 million urban
households — 1.1 percent of the total — do not have enough
living space. Many of the low-income families are still
close-packed in outdated residential areas in cities and
towns, Liu said. The country would accelerate the
establishment of a sound housing security system, looking for
stable housing funds, expanding affordable housing projects
and building a low-rate rental system, according to officials
of the Ministry of Construction. China began to explore new
housing systems to meet the demands of a market economy in the
early 1980s, and finally put an end to the old one, under
which each work unit distributed houses to its employees as a
benefit. A blueprint was formed in the late 1990s under which,
the poorest families rent low-rate houses provided by the
government or work units; medium and low-income families
purchase low-price houses; rich families buy or rent
commercial houses at fair market prices. More than 100 million
square meters of low-price housing is built in every year, or
more than half the total housing, statistics show. (Xinhua)
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