Problems and Countermeasures for our Country’s Sustainable Development of Real Estate Economy

2014 ◽  
Vol 1030-1032 ◽  
pp. 2597-2600
Author(s):  
Wei Xu ◽  
Xin Xiong

In 2010 to 2013 the national macro-control policies on the real estate market has a strong compressive force, although the development of China's real estate investment market continued to grow still present, but under the influence of regulation just to be national policy, the growth momentum has slowed . In this paper, based on the current status of the domestic real estate industry, in line with the theoretical basis of sustainable development, in-depth analysis of the domestic real estate industry problems encountered in the development process, made some suggestions and solutions for sustainable development

2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 346 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alice Barreca ◽  
Rocco Curto ◽  
Diana Rolando

Urban vibrancy is defined and measured differently in the literature. Originally, it was described as the number of people in and around streets or neighborhoods. Now, it is commonly associated with activity intensity, the diversity of land-use configurations, and the accessibility of a place. The aim of this paper is to study urban vibrancy, its relationship with neighborhood services, and the real estate market. Firstly, it is used a set of neighborhood service variables, and a Principal Component Analysis is performed in order to create a Neighborhood Services Index (NeSI) that is able to identify the most and least vibrant urban areas of a city. Secondly, the influence of urban vibrancy on the listing prices of existing housing is analyzed by performing spatial analyses. To achieve this, the presence of spatial autocorrelation is investigated and spatial clusters are identified. Therefore, spatial autoregressive models are applied to manage spatial effects and to identify the variables that significantly influence the process of housing price determination. The results confirm that housing prices are spatially autocorrelated and highlight that housing prices and NeSI are statistically associated with each other. The identification of the urban areas characterized by different levels of vibrancy and housing prices can effectively support the revision of the urban development plan and its regulatory act, as well as strategic urban policies and actions. Such data analyses support a deep knowledge of the current status quo, which is necessary to drive important changes to develop more efficient, sustainable, and competitive cities.


2013 ◽  
Vol 689 ◽  
pp. 473-476
Author(s):  
Wan Lin Chai ◽  
Yu Bo Gao

In recent years, consumption demand and national policy are irreconcilable in China villa market. This paper comprehensively analyzed the developing direction of villas in the circumstances of the changeable domestic real estate market, with the purpose of offering the theoretical foundation to the future planning and design. By way of illustration and inference, the results indicate that villa industry should conform to the policy, meet contemporary consumers' living and spending habits, and accord with science and technology progress request.


2004 ◽  
Vol 48 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Susanne Heeg

Mobilization of the real estate market? Financial market and real estate economy. Since the late 1980s the real estate industry in Germany is transforming from a locally embedded industry towards an internationally oriented one. In this article it is asked how this fundamental change was possible and how the internationalisation is taking place and is coordinated. A starting point of the internationalisation is the deregulation of the national financial system which resulted in a mobilisation and professionalisation of real estate agents. After describing the changes in the politicoinstitutional embedding of the real estate market, the restructuring of networks and its effects upon spatio-economic patterns is analysed. By dividing the real estate market in an user, land, developer and investment market it is possible to show different degrees of internationalisation in the markets and the interdependency of the different market agents upon each other. It is claimed that the financial deregulation is a central motor in transforming the spatial orientation of the agents.


2017 ◽  
Vol 43 (6) ◽  
pp. 864-885 ◽  
Author(s):  
Benjamin Holtzman

In 1970s New York, landlords and major real estate associations argued that New York could stem the exodus of middle-income residents by creating greater opportunities for homeownership in a city that had long been dominated overwhelmingly by renters. They proposed converting middle-income rental housing into cooperatives, a process that would also enable former landlords to profit handsomely. Tenants, however, widely rejected apartment ownership, preferring the security of rent-regulated housing. This article traces the ensuing struggles between tenants, the real estate industry, and city officials over the nature of moderate- and middle-income housing in New York. The eventual success of the real estate industry enabled cooperative conversions to expand dramatically in the 1980s, but only by bargaining with tenants and activists, offering tenants noneviction plans, and discounting prices. This process helped to transform the city by underwriting a momentous turnaround in the real estate market, while signaling a larger embrace of market deregulation.


2015 ◽  
Vol 59 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Nadine Bitterer ◽  
Susanne Heeg

The power of figures. Calculative practices in the real estate industry. This article examines the role and importance of calculative practices in the process of establishing a global property market. We argue that these practices have contributed to the transformation of the property market into a calculable relation which makes it possible to perceive and assess the real estate market and its objects internationally. Comparability - which includes the transformation of social, political and economic conditions into numbers - has created the context in which investment decisions take place because they suggest transparency and calculability. These practices are created and shared in a network of global real estate professionals and go along with strategies of territorializing and delineating markets. Yet, as we will argue, some local characteristics prove to be persistent and difficult to handle in global calculations. Thus, assessing global real estate markets still implies the challenge to combine local knowledge and global calculation.


2021 ◽  
Vol 106 ◽  
pp. 01012
Author(s):  
Sergey Sternik ◽  
Ilnur Gareev ◽  
Timur Akhmetgaliev

This article studies digital information databases and aggregators of the real estate market as tools for the correct determination of the real estate cadastral value for the purpose of sustainable development of regions. An overview of foreign studies and software products in the framework of determining the real estate cadastral value of objects is presented. The author shows the statistics of challenging the cadastral value in Russia, including a specific example, as well as analyzed the reports on the determination of the cadastral value for the presence of the use of information databases and aggregators of the real estate market. As a result of the study, the author’s ideas for filling and using the information database of real estate objects were proposed in order to correctly determine the real estate cadastral value of objects.


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