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GOVERNMENT INTERVENTION, LAND MARKET, AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT: EVIDENCE FROM CHINESE CITIES
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Citations
18
References
2016
Year
East Asian StudiesEconomic DevelopmentLand MarketUrban DevelopmentEconomic GrowthSocial SciencesUrban Land UseGovernment InterventionChinese PoliticsHigh Government InterventionHousingEconomicsUrban PolicyUrban Economic DevelopmentEast Asian LanguagesPopulation MigrationUrban PlanningHousing Price AppreciationChinese CitiesUrban EconomicsBusiness
This article investigates how government intervention in land market affects China's urban development, using data from prefecture‐level cities between 2000 and 2010. We find that government intervention enlarges the impact of positive productivity shocks on housing price appreciation, through mainly the government control over residential land supply. However, we find no significant evidence that high government intervention constrains population growth and leads to wage increase. Such patterns of urban dynamics can be explained by the fact that migrant workers are the driving force behind China's urbanization, but they have limited housing demand and are not well compensated. ( JEL P52, R12, H11)
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