This paper investigates the effect of direct government control of land supply on the efficiency of China's urban land market. The authors find that:
1) Before 2004, residential land prices were positively and significantly related to property prices, indicating an efficient market where land prices reflected demand.
2) After 2004, when the government established direct control over land supply through auctions, the relationship between land and property prices weakened considerably.
3) This suggests that government control of land supply reduced market efficiency by weakening the influence of property demand on determining land prices.
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Government Interference and the Efficiency of the LandMarket in China
1. Government Interference and the Efficiency of the Land
Market in China
Liang Peng & Thomas G. Thibodeau
Real Estate Assignment (BPLN0502)
Submitted by
Bhupendra Pratap Singh
2013bpln010
2. Government Interference and the Efficiency of the Land Market in China
Introduction
? This paper investigates the effect that direct government control on the supply of land has on the
efficiency of the Chinese urban land market.
? Richard F. Muth argue that the demand for land is derived from the demand for properties. Therefore, if
both the land and the property market are efficient in the sense that transaction prices reflect market
demand, land prices should depend on property prices.
? Using a unique data set of detailed land and residential community transactions with manually collected
location information for residential land lots in seven Chinese cities (Chengdu, Chongqing, Hangzhou,
Nanjing, Shanghai, Suzhou, Wuhan).
? The main finding is that residential property prices play a significant role in explaining residential land
prices both before and after the establishment of government control.
Keywords- Land market . Government interference . Market efficiency
3. Government Interference and the Efficiency of the Land Market in China
The Market for Residential Land in China
? The economy in mainland China was a planned, not a market oriented, economy from the establishment
of the People¡¯s Republic of China in 1949 until the beginning of the openness and reform policy initiated
by Deng Xiaoping in 1978.
? Rapid urbanization and economic growth triggered by the reform has been accompanied by the
development of a market oriented economy in China.
? In 1988, China¡¯s constitution, which previously had prohibited all types of land transfers, was amended
to permit land leasing while retaining public ownership of land.
? By 1992, local governments in Shanghai and Beijing had adopted land leasing as local practice, and it
began to spread to other cities.3 Land leases for residential properties in Chinese cities typically have 70
year terms
? In case of China, we call the existing tenant in land lease transactions the owner/seller and the new user
the buyer. (Government and the existing user share the revenue from the land lease transaction.)
4. Government Interference and the Efficiency of the Land Market in China
The Market for Residential Land in China
? The way municipal governments and sellers share proceeds varies across regions, which suggests
important location heterogeneity in the Chinese land market.
? Before 1999, land was transferred in one of two ways
First, the government could ¡°re-allocate¡± the right of possession of a lot from the existing tenant, often a
state owned enterprise, to a new user, also often a state owned enterprise.
Second, potential buyers and sellers could search for each other and negotiate a price for the lease. Once
a price was agreed by both parties, the land lease was exchanged, with the seller and the municipal
government sharing the proceeds of the transaction.
? After 1999, A new trading system called tender/auction/listing by some municipal governments
? The system is transparent as the characteristics of the land and final transaction prices are public
information, and all potential buyers are permitted to make offers.(in 2002 the adoption of this system
by all municipal governments for all commercial and residential land lots take place)
? Main motivation for this trading system, is that the central government is concerned about pricing frauds
that can reduce government revenues from land lease transactions.
5. Government Interference and the Efficiency of the Land Market in China
The Market for Residential Land in China
? An important change to the Chinese land lease market took place in August of 2004. On March 31st
2004, Order #71 of the Department of National Land Resources required that, after August 31st of 2004,
all land lease transactions must go through the tender/auction/listing system.
? As a result, the search-based competitive land market was eliminated.
? In the new market structure, municipal governments have direct control on land supply, as potential
sellers must obtain permission from their local governments to list their land for lease and buyers can
only make offers for land put on the market by local governments.
? The arbitrary land supply may weaken the relationship between observed land transaction prices and
the market demand for land. As a result, land prices may be less informative in reflecting land demand,
and in this sense the land market is less efficient
6. Government Interference and the Efficiency of the Land Market in China
Data & Analysis
? Analysis is based on 2,008 land lease transactions executed in the government tender/auction/listing
system and 3,469 transactions of new urban residential communities in seven Chinese cities: Chengdu,
Chongqing, Hangzhou, Nanjing, Shanghai, Suzhou, and Wuhan.
? The sample period is from January 2001 to December 2007. They obtain these 2,008 land transactions
and 3,469 residential community transactions after filtering and cleaning a raw data set of land
transactions in 25 cities and property transactions in 55 cities.
? Empirical analysis
? They use the relationship between residential land lease transaction prices and residential community
transaction prices to measure the efficiency of the Chinese land market.
7. Government Interference and the Efficiency of the Land Market in China
Conclusion
? In August 2004, municipal governments in China established direct control of the land supply by
requiring all buyers and sellers to go through a transparent tender/ listing/auction process to purchase
and sell land leases.
? land supply regulation influences the efficiency of the residential land market by altering the relationship
between residential land prices and residential property prices. Data analyze the relationship between
land and property prices from the first quarter of 2001 to the fourth quarter of 2007. results are as
follows..
?The relationship is positive and significant both before and after 2004:3 .
? but is much weaker after 2004:3.
? results in this paper are consistent with the hypothesis that the Chinese urban residential land market is
less efficient after local governments gained direct control on land supply, in the sense that land prices
are less affected by property prices.