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Real estate once drove China’s economic growth. Now it’s holding it back.

China’s yearslong housing market collapse has dealt a devastating blow to the wealth and confidence of Chinese households, and continues to be the biggest drag on the world’s second-largest economy.

But that could be about to change. Beijing has recently signaled it is prepared to take bolder steps to stabilize the housing market and boost overall economic growth. Late last month, the government announced plans to cut mortgage rates and lower home down payments – leading to an early October jump in new home sales in Beijing, Guangzhou, Shenzhen, and Shanghai.

Why We Wrote This

As China signals bold moves to revive its economy, all eyes are on its collapsing property market. Can the government restore the confidence of would-be homebuyers?

Experts say it’s not clear whether Beijing will unleash the massive monetary and fiscal stimulus needed to rebuild confidence in the economy – any such plan would require approval by the legislature’s standing committee in coming weeks. But many agree that the property market holds the key to a meaningful recovery.

The government has so far been reluctant to step in and backstop property developers who ran a high-risk business model, but it’s necessary to restore confidence, says Andrew Batson, China research director for Gavekal, a Hong Kong-based financial firm. 

“The people paying the price for developers’ bad behavior are not the developers, but the households themselves – and in fact every participant in the Chinese economy,” he says.

China has a glut of tens of millions of unoccupied housing units, many unfinished and unsold. An inescapable part of the landscape, seen from roads or trains, are compounds of hulking, empty high-rise buildings. Many of these “ghost cities,” as they’re often called, have no lights and a see-through quality due to their unfinished, open windows.

The country’s three-year-old housing market collapse has dealt a devastating blow to the wealth and confidence of Chinese households, and continues to be a huge damper on growth in the world’s second-largest economy.

But that could be about to change. Beijing has recently signaled it is prepared to take bolder steps to stabilize the housing market and boost overall economic growth. Late last month, the government announced plans to cut mortgage rates and lower home down payments – leading to an early October jump in new home sales in Beijing, Guangzhou, Shenzhen, and Shanghai.

Why We Wrote This

As China signals bold moves to revive its economy, all eyes are on its collapsing property market. Can the government restore the confidence of would-be homebuyers?

And for the first time, China’s top leaders stressed they must “stop the decline and return stability” to the real estate market, according to a statement following the Sept. 26 meeting of the Communist Party’s ruling Politburo. Last week, the finance minister pledged to shore up big banks and local governments with fresh funds, while a top economic planner projected the country will meet its growth target of around 5% this year.

Experts say it’s not clear whether Beijing will unleash the massive monetary and fiscal stimulus needed to rebuild confidence in the economy – any such plan would require approval by the legislature’s standing committee in coming weeks. But many agree that the property market holds the key to a meaningful recovery.

“[Property] is definitely the biggest drag on the economy, not just this year but over the past three years,” says Larry Hu, chief China economist and managing director at Macquarie Group in Hong Kong.

Ann Scott Tyson/The Christian Science Monitor

Customers discuss an apartment purchase with employees of the Lianjia real estate company in Chengdu, China, June 11, 2024.

“The current property downturn easily could drag China’s GDP growth [down] by two percentage points,” he says. “But if we have property stabilized, then the Chinese economy could easily grow 5 or 6%. That’s a huge difference.”

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