China’s Property Crisis Is Starting to Look a Lot Like Japan’s Lost Decade
China’s Property Crisis Is Starting to Look a Lot Like Japan’s Lost Decade
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China’s Property Crisis Is Starting to Look a Lot Like Japan’s Lost Decade - CEOWORLD magazine
China’s Property Slump Is Starting to Look Uncomfortably Familiar It is not often that the world’s second‑largest economy finds itself compared, in sober academic work, to Japan on the eve of its “Los...

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/53072462
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The central risk is not a sudden systemic collapse, but a drawn‑out period of sub‑par growth, weak returns on investment, and fragile confidence—a pattern that will sound familiar to students of Japan’s post‑1990 trajectory.
Several specific challenges stand out:
- Demographics: An aging, shrinking population caps housing demand and undermines the traditional link between urbanization and construction booms.
- Balance sheets: Developers, local governments, and some financial institutions face long, grinding deleveraging cycles.
- Policy trade‑offs: Stimulating housing too aggressively risks re‑inflating the bubble; tightening too hard risks tipping growth into a deeper downturn.
- Confidence: Once households lose faith in property as a one‑way wealth escalator, rebuilding sentiment can take years.
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