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Property policies stir marriage concerns

2013-04-04 08:58 Xinhua     Web Editor: Wang Fan comment

Many have complained that Chinese marriages are losing their romantic side to pragmatic calculation, partly due to new housing policies.

A string of new housing price control policies have sparked concern, as some couples have tried to sidestep the restrictions by getting divorced or by entering into "fake" marriages.

Detailed housing price regulations aimed at cooling the property market were rolled out last week in many cities following a central government regulatory plan issued last month.

According to a new rule introduced by the Beijing government last Friday, single adults with permanent Beijing residence registration are banned from buying second homes, leading some to speculate that people may enter into "false" marriages to skirt the regulation.

This is not the first time that the links between marital status and housing controls have come under fire in China.

In early March, the State Council said that a 20-percent individual income tax would be levied on capital gains by home sellers whose families own more than one apartment.

Days after the new regulation was put into force, couples across the country flocked to register for divorce to avoid the tax.

A restriction of the number of family residences in big cities has also led to divorce for some.

Zhang Zhongliang, 39, decided to divorce his wife -- not to end their 18-year relation, but to allow for the purchase of the family's third apartment.

In order to better take care of their son, the couple decided to buy an apartment near the school he is scheduled to attend. But the city government only allows them to have two apartments at most.

"I have no alternative but to divorce and more might be forced to walk this way," said Zhang, who lives in Wuhan, capital of central China's Hubei Province.

"After we get divorced, my wife will claim our apartments so that I can buy a new apartment as a first-home buyer, since I don't have a house under my name. We will remarry after that," Li said, adding that he got the idea from a local newspaper.

The number of people coming to register for divorce has increased dramatically over the past month, said an employee of the Civil Affairs Bureau of Wuhan's Wuchang District who declined to be named.

A Wednesday report carried by the China Youth Daily said that 1,255 couples registered to divorce from March 4 to 8 in north China's Tianjin municipality, marking a 470-percent increase compared with the number that registered in the previous week.

"The 'fake' divorces and marriages reveal design defects and loopholes in the country's property control policies," said Xia Xueluan, a professor from the sociology department of Peking University.

Professor Qiao Xinsheng at the Wuhan-based Zhongnan University of Economics and Law said every family should be prudent before making such a decision, adding that he believes flexible modern attitudes regarding marriage have contributed to the phenomenon.

"The policies should be the main area of focus, as opposed to people's attitudes toward marriage," Qiao said.

Economists have called for building a sound property market in accordance with the principles of a market economy.

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