China keeping rent low and housing affordable is the reason why the West thinks China's economy is collapsing. They can't comprehend a world where the economy doesn't prioritize the rich.
Westoid economists were screaming about how China's real estate market is overheated and will crash, and now that the CPC has done something about it, they're screaming about how the real estate market isn't growing as fast so China is doomed.
It is not just "overproduction". It is "overproduction" with a "stagnating economy" during an "economic downturn". Only China is capable of collapsing in multiple contradictory ways at the same time like this.
the maoist uprising against the landlords was the largest and most comprehensive proletarian revolution in history, and led to almost totally-equal redistribution of land among the peasantry
Surprised to see so many upvotes and no one correct this to Marxist-Leninist uprising since Maoism was barely a thing at that point of history, and the CPC at no point as ever advocated anything called Maoism.
Imagine having a productive economy, real CHADS like the US or THE FREE WEST have real strong economies predicated on scamming/ponzi-ing the other through markets finance and the third sector, and no such outdated economical bases like industry or infrastructure
You, a fool, a peasant: Gathers wood and stone from his surroundings to build a tower (it is not efficient or competitive)
Me, a genius: builds some of a tower, then starts taking material from the bottom and putting it on the top (fast, disruptive, I will achieve self-actualization in no time)
Popular Chinese movies acknowledge high price of real estate in large cities. All theses movies are available in US, have subtitles in English and can be accessed using popular streaming services.
Examples:
Some of dialogue involving parents, if i recall right:
In the following show lower income aerospace engineer and high income actress. They directly state that he could not afford small apartment if not for money grant for being the best:
The dates on the shows are 2016 and 2021, and as we can see the real estate really starts winding down around 2022. The housing prices are naturally going to lag as well. So, I don't think there's any contradiction here.
But they're based in it. Especially dramas or soap operas which work because people relate to the characters or at least realize that what they're going through can happen in the world. A silly example: a Cuban wouldn't make Breaking Bad because why would the protagonist need to find cash for his treatment or kids, when healthcare and education are free?
So while we can't tell how widespread the issues in those dramas are, it's valid to say that they do appear in China (or appeared when they were created).
Tier 2 and even tier 3 cities in China seem pretty liveable from the vlogs I have seen. Cities having high costs/rents is a problem but it's not a problem as bad as in, say, India where the urban-rural disparity is much more stark.
The 'for living' doesn't mean free, means affordable for the average person/family living there.
But yes, dense city centres all over the world have about the same problem (since ancient times, up until railways & commuting, when for a bit poor/working class people lived outside the city).
Even in sci-fi movies the top few hundred floors are nice, all the other floors never get daylight or even a sense of where the sun is. Especially if there are roads/allies/"streets" between floors on various levels.
It's not the Chinese buying real estate in the west, it's Chinese capitalists. A lot of Hong Kong bourgeois for example have been buying property in and in many cases have moved to the west since 1997, since they're terrified of losing their extortionate privilege of property ownership under the dictatorship of the proletariat.
Working class Chinese people, while on average wealthier than their western working class counterparts, do not have the capital nor the material interest to buy real estate in the west, whether for speculation or to move their ill gotten gains out of China.