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China's Ghost Cities

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Uploaded by on Nov 25, 2011

China's "ghost cities" show that the country's economic boom could be more fragile than it appears.

Kangbashi is a showcase city, laid out spaciously on the grasslands of northern China.
It was dreamt up by the local secretary of the Communist Party as a monument to the country's new-found prosperity.
The place is dominated by impressive public buildings - a marble-clad library, a state-of-the-art theatre and a giant convention centre.
In the centre of town a 70m-high statue of two fighting horses looms over Genghis Khan Square.
The only thing missing is the people.
Kangbashi was built to house one million residents, but so far only 20,000 have moved in.

Like many roads in the sparsely-populated city of Kangbashi, this one lies empty

Acres of apartment complexes - many of them luxurious by Chinese standards - are deserted. Store fronts are boarded up.
When they first began building Kangbashi, there was a frenzy of investment. The local government contributed a £200m road network. Nearly all of the homes that now lie empty were sold off-plan.
The buyers were China's cashed-up new middle class. The country's poorly-regulated stock markets, along with controls on investing overseas, have made second, third and even fourth homes a popular store of wealth.
But from the very outset, Kangbashi defied all economic logic. There's no industry in the city, and no real reason to live there.
Now Kangbashi - along with other "ghost cities" dotted around China - has come to symbolise what many believe is a dangerous property bubble that could be primed to pop.
The scale of China's housing boom is staggering. Over the past five years the country has built nearly 40 million new homes. In some cities the price of housing has tripled in the same period.
Chinese economist Zhang Bin said: "If you look at financial crises, they're always accompanied by property bubbles.
"Lower property prices would definitely be more sustainable and healthy, but a sharp drop would mean a big contraction in the economy and problems like unemployment."

Kangbashi's public buildings are impressive, but not very busy

In Kangbashi, many think the bubble has already popped.
Businessman Wang Pen spent his life savings buying a two-bedroom apartment. He says its value has fallen by 20% since the start of the year.
But Mr Wang finds it difficult to believe that the good times will ever stop rolling.
"When I bought this one three years ago I was still poor, so it's a bit small," he said.
"Now I'm thinking of getting another place, something bigger."
If the bubble bursts on a nationwide scale, it could be disastrous, not just for China, but for global economic recovery.
China is now the world's second-biggest economy, and by some estimates nearly half of its GDP is in some way linked to property.
Alistair Thornton, Beijing-based economist with HIS Global Insight, said: "Property is the core of the Chinese economy.
"With the eurozone weak and the US stagnant, a sharp contraction in the world's largest growth engine would have a dramatic effect. It's not a good story."

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Uploader Comments (MrGlasgowTruther4U)

  • china and other countries are preparing for the alien invasion - where do you think the aliens are going to live?

  • @mynameisnobodyz the last place any aliens that have mastered interstellar travel would want to live is alongside us backward war loving scumbags on this used up planet lol

Top Comments

  • All part of the NWO plan. Hurd them together like cattle for easier biochemical eugenics of the 6 billion population extermination agenda. They have something very big planned for us all. Too obvious for even the non intuitive to not recognize the warning signs.

  • @LendMeYourHand LOL Stay on your meds nutjob. And stick to watching your conspiracy videos.

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All Comments (30)

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  • @tjohn1986 No meds here, but i will be sure to count you out of the equation, if you know what i mean. I wont just sit and watch for long.

  • China is in real danger their economy is going in toilet bubble just burst and they also like us and EU are out of money bad days are coming soon communistic plan economy ver very bad and ugly ...

  • this reminds me of Minecraft

  • the feelings expressions of every western journalist specialy those who working mainstream media they try to defend corporation's mistakes which send milions western jobs to the china and bring false news every single day, they don't need to discuse whats wrong western economy, they must explain who create this catastrophic economic depression otherwise stop fake news, people knew what's going on!

  • @ArronTattersall True i'd probably trust this guy with my soul, but if there is no one else around to blame or be afraid of..,just sayin...

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