cirr
ELITE MEMBER
- Joined
- Jun 28, 2012
- Messages
- 17,049
- Reaction score
- 18
- Country
- Location
Methods to Make It Easier for Farmers to Sell Land
Nov. 18, 2013 8:06 a.m. ET
BEIJING—China is studying new ways to measure the size of its economy to reflect ambitious reform plans to make it easier for farmers to sell their land and to take into account property values.
The new methods, which dovetail with an economic blueprint for reforms agreed on at a key meeting of Communist Party leaders that ended last week, are likely to increase the size of China's economy, already the world's second largest, according to the National Bureau of Statistics.
"We need to revise the method of calculating the size of our domestic economy to make it conform with a new economic structure, the latest economic developments and…international standards," the statistics bureau said.
Officials didn't specify how much the new calculations might change China's headline numbers, or whether it is likely to speed up or slow growth rates. The statistics bureau will announce gross-domestic-product estimates using the new method along with revised historical data, the statement said.
China's Communist Party leaders unveiled a broad program of reforms last week. One of their objectives was to make it easier for farmers to sell the right to use some of their land. Farmers don't own their land, but have the right to use it. Among a number of changes outlined in a document released Friday, China's leaders pledged to boost income for rural residents by giving them more property rights, allowing them to mortgage their property and envisioning experiments in letting farmers sell their land.
Given the rapid growth in the property market, the statistics bureau also wants to gain a more accurate assessment of higher land and housing values in calculating GDP, using market rates and bringing its calculations more in line with international practice, it said.
The authorities have already begun the new calculations in some parts of the country on a trial basis. The statistics bureau will announce the GDP estimates using the new method along with revised historical data, the statement said.
The Chinese economy was estimated at 51.89 trillion yuan ($8.52 trillion) in 2012. It grew 7.7% in the first nine months of 2013, compared with the period in 2012.
The proposed revisions by the statistics bureau are part of an effort to implement reform guidelines unveiled at the Communist Party meeting, which ended last week, said Xu Xianchun, the statistics bureau's deputy chief, in a statement on the bureau's website.
Income of corporate employees from options and shares issued by their employer also will be included into the new measuring system, Mr. Xu said. At present, there are no indicators to measure such income, he said. Consumption measurements also will be revised to include some services paid by the government, such as for education and medical treatment, the statement said.
A final plan will be announced at the end of next year or in early 2015, according to the statement.
—Liyan Qi
China Studies New Ways to Measure Size of Economy - WSJ.com