To read this content please select one of the options below:

Land use rights reform and the real estate market in China: a synoptic account of theoretical issues and the property rights system

Lawrence Wai Chung Lai (Lecturer in the Department of Surveying, University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, and Visiting Fellow at the Ian Buchan Fell Research Centre, University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia.)

Property Management

ISSN: 0263-7472

Article publication date: 1 December 1995

1449

Abstract

Is China′s “land use rights” legislation which distinguishes transferable “land use rights” and inalienable “land ownership”, a novel concept unknown to human kind before, or a pragmatic reversion to the private property rights system abolished by the communist revolution? Advocates the view that the latter is a more correct interpretation. As part of a “going capitalist” economic reform programme, such a reversion is manifested in the legal recognition of the leasehold tenure after the “responsibility system” in privatizing agricultural production had proved to be successful. As the development of private property rights is a prelude to market transactions, the Chinese land use rights reform should be conducive to the success of the economic liberalization policy of China, provided that there is a contemporaneous advance in the development of the rule of law and technical know‐how, such as valuation and land surveying.

Keywords

Citation

Wai Chung Lai, L. (1995), "Land use rights reform and the real estate market in China: a synoptic account of theoretical issues and the property rights system", Property Management, Vol. 13 No. 4, pp. 21-28. https://doi.org/10.1108/02637479510099288

Publisher

:

MCB UP Ltd

Copyright © 1995, MCB UP Limited

Related articles