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有人提出:为什么房改政策要以中等收入者每户60平方米为标准?其潜台词是,近年市场热销户型是每套80平方米以上,每套60平方米的并不好销。 2000年,人均CDP已达3.6万美元的日本和2.4万美元的香港地区。他们多数中等收入居民仍还住在50~60平方米一套的住房内。另据调查,日本大城市近几年来竣工的住宅小区,每套住宅的户型为40~70平方米。我国现时人均CDP不到1000美元,少数大城市虽有达两三千美元的,占比还相当低。并且,过去建的公房,数量最多的是每套55~65平方米的二居室,其次的是70~80平方米的三
Some people have raised the question: Why is the housing reform policy required that every household with a median income of 60 square meters should be regarded as a standard? The subtext is that in recent years, the hot-selling units in the market are more than 80 square meters each, and each set of 60 square meters does not sell well. In 2000, the per capita CDP had reached 36,000 U.S. dollars in Japan and 24,000 U.S. dollars in Hong Kong. Most of their middle-income residents still live in apartments of 50 to 60 square meters. According to another survey, the Japanese cities completed in recent years, residential quarters, each apartment layout for the 40 to 70 square meters. At present, the per capita CDP in our country is less than 1,000 U.S. dollars. Although a few large cities amount to two or three thousand U.S. dollars, their proportion is still quite low. And, in the past built public housing, the largest number is each set of 55 to 65 square meters of two-bedroom, followed by 70 to 80 square meters of three