posted on 2008-01-01, 00:00authored byH Wu, Richard Reed
This paper discusses the economic transition and the property market emergence in transition economies. It compares the Chinese property market with the Polish market. It preliminarily examines market emergence and maturity in the context of economic transition, comparing the transitions with the emphasis placed on commercial property markets especially their formation and behaviour. Supply and demand for commercial space in China and Poland are also contrasted. As commercial property market behaviour is somewhat driven by market structure formation process and the business cycle, the transition has provided a “common ground” that enables similarities between the property markets in China and Poland. The challenge for state intervention is mainly due to the agency problem which is also a problem in mature markets; it appears that transitional economies do share common features in their emerging property markets. This paper suggests state intervention in market formation and emergence is necessary and essential. However the actual formation and behaviour of property markets have some distinctive characteristics. Value or implication of the study include: knowing the stage of market emergence is essential for making investment decisions, especially when identifying markets with varying backgrounds. This paper is also relevant to policy-makers in the process of facilitating transitions in emerging markets.
History
Location
Shanghai, China
Open access
Yes
Start date
2008-07-12
End date
2008-07-15
Language
eng
Notes
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Publication classification
E1.1 Full written paper - refereed
Copyright notice
2008, ASRES
Title of proceedings
ASRES 2008 : Proceedings of the 13th Asian Real Estate Society conference 2008