China’s
Construction Market:
A New Star in the East
By Roseanne Freese
After decades of virtually no housing starts–and no income
with which to refurbish existing structures–the trillion-dollar Chinese
economy is poised to enter a new era where private market forces will direct and
shape the newly released purchasing power of China’s middle class.
Construction companies now number in the thousands, while
panel, furniture and interior products manufacturers are in the tens of
thousands. According to China’s Ministry of Construction, China plans to start
work on 380 million square meters (4.1 billion square feet) of new housing
projects in 2000, with 5 billion more square meters (53 billion square feet) to
be built with government funding by the year 2005.
As part of the initial package of housing market reforms of
1998, Chinese government agencies at local, provincial and national levels are
selling off publicly held apartments and allowing new owners to either keep or
resell the acquired property at their own risk.
In 1998 the United States and China also embarked on a
bilateral Presidential Housing Initiative whereby the United States would
provide expertise on mortgage management, low-income housing policy and building
standards and codes that would favor the use of renewable resources, such as
wood, in commercial and residential property development.
Equally significant is reform to the business mechanisms of
real estate. For the first time in 50 years, public and trade organizations are
drawing up mortgage lending, property transfer and real estate regulations
especially designed for private property holders in China.
Privatized Property: The Switch Is On
Government programs do not tell the whole story;
private-sector construction is now on the rise. For example, the international
realty firm Century 21 opened its second franchise in Beijing in July 2000 while
84 Lumber of Pennsylvania has begun to ship prefabricated homes and other
solid-wood construction products to southern China.
China is privatizing all spheres of its real estate sector,
including trade in materials, investment and construction. In the first four
months of 2000 alone, 49 new companies began importing timber and other solid
wood products.
This is a far cry from the designated trading enterprise
system of the 1980s where roughly only two state-owned agencies per province
were permitted to import on a case-by-case basis.
Recent press reports indicate that China now has 25,000 real
estate firms of which 5,000 are overseas (mostly from Hong Kong and Taiwan)
joint ventures.
In June 2000, China also held the first China International
Timber and Timber Products Exhibition. Grace Zheng, China Director for the
American Forest and Paper Association’s office in Beijing, notes that private
housing developments are going up throughout China, including single-family
detached and row housing construction, and some of these projects number in the
hundreds of units, with two-bedroom units selling for as much as 30 and 40
thousand dollars in Shanghai and Beijing.
Currently the national average commercial housing price is
2,100 RMB or $23 per square foot. With the average apartment size running 50
square meters or 540 square feet (half the size of a typical two-bedroom
apartment in the United States), an unfinished apartment sells for $12,500.
Apartment prices in the coastal cities, however, run much higher.
Spending on Decor To Soar Even More
Since Chinese housing is sold unfinished, the boom in the renovation and interiors markets is heard even louder in the marketplace. According to the China Furniture Association, China’s furniture and interior panel market sales both at home and abroad will be worth $20 billion in 2000. The China Building Decoration Association estimates that Chinese consumers will purchase 10 million cubic meters (or 350 million cubic feet) of paneling valued at $1.8 billion just for their homes this year alone.
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Not only are consumers buying molding, paneling and window and door frames for their newly purchased homes, but they are replacing furniture more often. The average replacement period for furniture has fallen from once every decade or longer to once every four to eight years. Demand for furniture and interior panel products for China’s rapidly growing hotel and commercial office sector is pulling additional billions of dollars into a market that 20 years ago was managed by under invested government monopolies. According to FAS market reports from Beijing, over 300,000 luxury hotel rooms will need to be remodeled, including replacement furniture in the near future. A Market of Promises and Pitfalls The scale and scope of China’s multi-billion-dollar housing
boom is expected to increase at rates approaching 10 percent a year for the next
five years, according to China’s Ministry of Construction. The expansion of
the construction and interiors markets, however, is not without pitfalls. |
Last but not least, U.S. market education efforts are
starting to kick in. The American Forest and Paper Association, the American
Hardwood Export Council, the Softwood Export Council and APA–the Engineered
Wood Association–through their representatives in Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou
and Hong Kong–are embarking on a nationwide, multi-sector program to introduce
Chinese architects, designers, trade associations and standards organizations to
the structural, environmental and aesthetic benefits that uniquely exemplify
American solid wood products.
With total Chinese solid wood imports moving toward a record
$4 billion in 2000, there is much room to grow for all U.S. manufacturers of
structural components, exterior and interior finished products and furniture
products for the home and office.
While U.S. flooring and softwood plywood sales to China are
down due to rapidly expanding domestic capacity, exports of hardwood and
softwood lumber, hardwood plywood, moldings and many other major value-added
products have increased strongly.
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The author is an agricultural economist in the FAS Forest and Fisheries Products Division. Tel.: (202) 720-0770; Fax: (202) 720-8461; E-mail: freeser@fas.usda.gov
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