Why 50 Million Chinese Homes are Empty - YouTube

Channel: PolyMatter

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This video is sponsored by Skillshare.
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The first 500 people to use the link in the description get their first two months free.
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Deep, in the mountains of Austria, lies the small, but scenic town of Hallstatt.
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But this isn’t that, It’s an exact replica, built 9,000 kilometers away, near Hong Kong.
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Austria.
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China.
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It’s home to European architecture, Chinese cuisine, and all the traffic of

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North Korea.
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Because, during the day, it may be the wedding photo capital of the region,
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But after the sun sets, its cottages become remarkably quiet.
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China’s lookalike towns, of places like Paris, Berlin, London, and Jackson Hole, Wyoming,
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aren’t alone.
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In many places, across China, there are far more houses than there are people.
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Long rows of apartments, even entire cities, sit completely, or mostly empty.
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In total, approximately 50 million units, Or 22% of China’s entire urban housing.
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But this doesn’t mean they aren’t being bought.
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Because, they are.
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Like crazy.
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Ten years ago, most people were, as you’d expect, buying homes for the first time.
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Today, it looks like this.
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Second homes are the majority, and people are buying almost as many third homes as first!
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These aren’t cheap, either.
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In Los Angeles, the price per square foot is $633.
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In Shenzhen, 805.
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And, close your eyes, because you don’t even wanna know the price in Hong Kong.
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Now consider the difference in wages.
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The average annual income in Shenzhen is around 7,500 US Dollars, compared to 60 thousand
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in LA.
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Something clearly doesn’t add up.
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People in China are buying homes like Americans buy
 cars, But they’re leaving them empty,
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And it’s not clear where the money is coming from, or why they’re being built.
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The usual explanation is that China’s government is so desperate for economic growth that it
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builds bridges to nowhere and houses to
 look at.
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But that’s only one part of a much bigger story.
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China’s troubles begin with its political system.
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The Central Government is the highest level of its only party.
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Here, laws are written and the fate of the nation, decided.
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Beijing is THE ultimate authority.
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It appoints everyone from secretaries to governors, and isn’t afraid to move them around should
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any one official gain too much influence.
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BUT - it would also be a mistake to see China as one, singular power.
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Because below the central government is a network of local divisions: 22 regional provinces,
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4 municipalities, 4 autonomous regions, and 2 Special Administrative.
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Under those are over 300 prefectures.
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Followed by the less important counties, townships, and villages.
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Now, just as Californians have different concerns than do Texans or Floridians,
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China is a big country, and the interests of a coastal exporter like Shenzhen are very
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different than those of, say, a more independent region like Inner Mongolia.
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The same is true for different levels of government.
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While Beijing writes the rules, cities apply and enforce them.
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Often, very differently.
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And there’s one, awkward little detail: Cities receive just 40% of tax revenue, but
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are responsible for 80% of their expenses.
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So, naturally, they need another source of income.
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And this is where things get interesting.
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In China, rural land is collectively owned.
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Everyone, and also no-one, owns it, which means it can’t be the location of a new
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luxury apartment.
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But luckily for cities, they have the power to rezone land from rural to urban, which
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can be developed.
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In other words, they own a money printing machine.
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Watch this: First, a city buys cheap, rural land, Which it then redefines as urban, And
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finally, sells to developers at its now, much higher, price.
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Like.
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Magic.
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Over, and over, and over, again.
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Cities get much-needed cash, and developers build housing like it’s nobody’s business.
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Now, unlike states in America, local governments here are generally forbidden from taking loans.
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But, again, there’s a loophole.
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Cities can create a Local Government Financial Vehicle, which is a fancy way of saying, a
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state-owned company.
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And by “giving” it that new urban land, the “company” can do what the city legally
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can’t: borrow money.
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Which, they can use to build roads, schools, and, on occasion, replica Austrian towns.
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This is so effective that, in some years, land sales account for 40% of local government
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revenue.
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Plus, all this construction increases GDP, which just so happens to be the way officials
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get promoted.
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It’s a perfect system.
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At least, until it’s not.
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If, or, when, housing prices fall, so does city revenue.
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And, all those loans probably won’t magically disappear.
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Beijing wants to avoid a housing crisis, but cities just want to survive, and governors,
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get promoted, which puts the two at odds.
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Eventually, cities start running out of land to sell, and have no choice but to build more.
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Like this one, which spent 2 billion dollars blowing up the tops of mountains.
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Those developers who purchase that land, by the way, are required to use it, which leads
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to many, often quickly-constructed, low-quality, houses.
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And that brings us to the second question: why are people buying them?
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And doing it like their life depended on it?
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Well, for one, because it kinda does.
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Thanks to the famous One Child Policy, China now has the entire population of Canada more
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men than women.
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And that means fierce competition for marriage.
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Men are expected to own at least one property before even being considered.
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It’s one of the most important elements of social status.
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For many, real estate isn’t just an opportunity, it’s a downright social necessity.
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Because of this, friends and family pool money together to help buy homes for their children.
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And that’s how, nearly everyone, in a country with the per capita GDP of the Dominican Republic,
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can afford some of the most expensive homes on the planet.
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The other big factor is that Chinese citizens Save.
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Like.
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Crazy.
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When it comes to saving money, there’s China, and then there’s basically everyone else.
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Where, Europeans put 4 percent of their disposable income in the piggy bank, Chinese drop nearly
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40!
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The problem is, where can they put it?.
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China’s domestic stock market is just too risky, And its banks are often seen as unpredictable.
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Which makes real estate a Chinese investor’s best friend.
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It alone accounts for 70% of all household wealth.
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It also doesn’t hurt that property tax is a beautiful 0%.
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When taxes are only paid upfront, why wouldn’t you buy as soon as possible, and just sit
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on it?
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Put all this together, and you have a recipe for extreme house buying.
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An amazing 90% of homes are owned by their residents.
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Europe and the U.S., stand at 69 and 64%, respectively.
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And while we’re on the subject of crazy high numbers, Ninety-four percent of Chinese
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millennials who don’t already own, plan on buying in the next five years.
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What else do 94% of people agree on?
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Not even China can quench this thirst for real estate.
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Despite laws against it, billions of dollars flow out of the country every year into foreign
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property.
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It’s so common in places like Vancouver, that, earlier this year, it introduced a 20%
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tax for foreigners.
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The irony is that while cities like Beijing and Hong Kong have so little room, people
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are forced to sleep underground, these 50 million homes can’t find renters.
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So, hey, if you live in California, I think I may have found an escape plan.
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Anyway, not only are these homes bought without interiors, literally just concrete walls,
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but they’re also usually located outside city centers, where there aren’t as many
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jobs.
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Now, the assumption in all of this, is that, eventually, people will come, And speculation
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will become reality.
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The Eastern side of Shanghai, for example, was once laughed at by Milton Friedman for
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being totally empty.
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Today, as a financial capital of the world, with a GDP of 400 billion, we can pretty safely
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say it’s proven the haters wrong.
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China is in the process of migrating 300 million people from country to city, And, of course,
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they’ll need a place to live.
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Inevitably, many of these cities will spring to life.
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That doesn’t mean everything is peachy.
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A few things are decidedly not peachy.
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First, remember that the vast majority of empty homes is expensive, commodity housing.
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These are not the kinds of places you buy coming from a farm in the country.
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And second, all these homes have an expiration date.
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In China, a building can be owned, but the land beneath it can only ever be leased - from
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the government, for 70 years.
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After that, it’s anyone’s guess whether ownership will be renewed.
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And if so, for how much.
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But, the truth is, 70 years is pretty optimistic

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Think about it this way: If construction is good for GDP, why build once, when you can
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build and re-build every few years?
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It’s kinda like the iPhone, if you’d like to upgrade every year, Apple will happily
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sell you a new phone.
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It’s certainly not judging.
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Except, in the case of China’s housing, developers are incentivized to make short-term
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bets, they know their homes will only last a few decades anyway, which means using lower
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quality materials.
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Meanwhile, cities continue taking loans and housing prices continue rising unsustainably.
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Of course, Beijing knows all this.
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It’s aware of the bubble, the risks involved, and it knows more or less how to fix it - some
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combination of slowing down lending, reining-in local governments, and introducing a property
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tax, like Shanghai.
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The problem is, real estate is so intertwined with its GDP, that any of these solutions
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would seriously risk slowing down its economy.
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In the coming decades, the world will watch as China does its best to carefully balance
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its enormous challenges with its relentless desire to grow its economy and realize The
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Chinese Dream.
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As Beijing prepares for economic change by diversifying its revenue, You and I should
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