balenciaga
Banned
The Chinese ghost cities meme is overplayed. They're almost all located in the far western parts of the country. And they're usually not so much 'cities' as massive suburbs.
Comparing Toronto to a city like Shanghai is a little pointless. There are roughly 300m people in China who are expected to move to cities like Shanghai. And of the hundreds of millions of people currently living in cities, more than a third live in units lacking things like a kitchen or plumbing; as incomes rise those people will demand bigger units with mod-cons, putting still more pressure.
This WSJ article neatly summarizes the challenge:
I know China's authoritarianism and corruption result in the occasional suburb being built which ends up empty, but a handful of empty subdivisions hardly undermines the sheer amount of construction that will be needed.
There really isn't any comparison between the Shanghais and us. We face totally different circumstances.
I agree with you. What happens in a handful of small western cities does not in any way represent large coastal cities.
During the 2002-2012 period, the population of Shanghai increased by about 6 million (create the entire GTA in 10 years), and is expected to increase by another 5M in the next decade. in 1982, Shanghai had about 12M, now 30 years later, it has about twice as that.
In 2012, GDP per capital is almost $13,000 (nominal, over $20k in PPP) in Shanghai, from about $5,000 in 2002. What's the first thing when people get richer? They ask for better housing.
With this kind of growth in both population and wealth,extremely high demand is not surprising.
You are right, there isn't really any comparison between Shanghai and us. Totally different circumstances. We are a much smaller city with much slower growth.
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