Some food for thought on the scale of the real estate bubble in China. Tokyo 1990 is no comparison.
http://www.chinarealestatenews.com/n...0-07-07/29582/
http://webcache.googleusercontent.co...&ct=clnk&gl=sg
If this doesn't sink in, let's compare with the average household income in NYC of $80,000. 37 times of $80,000 will be nearly $3 million for an average home.
http://www.crainsnewyork.com/article...14&cat=economy
Shanghai requires 30% cash payment for first home. 30% of $3 million -> $900,000 CASH down.
http://www.chinarealestatenews.com/n...0-07-07/29582/
the first half of last year and this year the second half of the largest price gains in recent years, a period of Shanghai, historical data show that in 2010, Because in April before the housing prices driven forces, Shanghai, the average price average house sold has already reached 260 million, the average annual household income of 70,000 yuan Shanghai 37 times.
With skyrocketing land prices, urban housing prices have begun rising in tandem. Generally speaking, the wage income of workers alone can limit the price of the acquisition of building should be the annual income of about 5 times. In 1990, the Tokyo metropolitan area home prices and the ratio of annual income of more than 10 times, in the core region reached nearly 20 times. Even in the Osaka metropolitan area, the ratio of more than 7 times.
http://www.crainsnewyork.com/article...14&cat=economy
Shanghai requires 30% cash payment for first home. 30% of $3 million -> $900,000 CASH down.
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