China’s most expensive cities

The city with the highest housing price in China is four times that of Beijing, with more than 200,000RMB per square meter.

With the release of the restrictive policy to encourage rental housing and the increase in bank loan interest rates, in the first half of 2018, the rate of increase in housing prices in my country seems to have declined to a certain extent, but in first-tier and second-tier cities represented by first-tier cities, housing prices are still In the midst of internal and external troubles.

HongKong real estate.

For example, in the urban area of ​​Beijing and Shanghai, the average price in many areas is even more than 60,000 RMB per square meter. However, I recently discovered that Shanghai and Beijing are not considered more expensive areas, and there are other places where the more expensive areas are.

Located in the Pearl River Delta region, Hong Kong was once a British colony. Because of its location and historical time, Hong Kong’s economic development has developed rapidly and has quickly ranked as a first-tier city in the world.

But in contrast, it is the population that is gathering more and more. With the influx of many different places into Hong Kong, Hong Kong’s population openness has ranked among the top three in the world.

The high density of the population also results in soaring housing prices. Hong Kong’s housing prices are different from those in mainland China, which are actually priced in square inches. In the lively area of ​​Kowloon City, the price of a high-rise residential apartment building is actually NT$2.6 per square inch. Converted into RMB, it costs more than 200,000 yuan per square meter, which is more than four times the housing price in Beijing!

Seeing this, do you have a vague sense of a collapse in Hong Kong’s housing prices? No wonder Hong Kong renters are so popular. A room is just separated from the bed by a wire cage, and some people live there. Even well-known directors in Hong Kong agree that buying a house will reduce their quality of life, so they have been renting a house.

If you think about it that way, the housing prices in our mainland have also continued to skyrocket, but compared to Hong Kong, it may be considered happy. However, Hong Kong’s large population also represents a great opportunity, and there will also be faster resources for buying houses there. If it were you, how would you choose?

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