Abstract

With increasingly high housing prices, the urban housing problem has changed from an economic issue to a livelihood issue in China. Taking 32 major cities in China as an example, this paper employed data from 2007 to 2016 to build a panel data model to empirically study the impact of population migration on urban housing prices. From the two perspectives of the national level and regional level (eastern region, central region and western region), the results of this study showed that (1) on the national level, population inflow had a significant positive correlation with urban housing prices, where a population inflow rate increase of 1% increased urban housing prices by 0.31%; and (2) on the regional level, a population inflow rate increase of 1% increased urban housing prices in the eastern region by 1.34%, but population inflow had no obvious impact on the urban housing prices in the central and western regions. Based on the results, this study suggested addressing housing supply imbalances through housing product diversification and affordable housing system improvement, and addressing construction land supply imbalances by building a perfect system linking land-use planning to population; at the same time, it also suggested building more nationally central cities following the urbanization trend, and taking this as the key to developing urban agglomerations, reasonably decentralizing the population flow, promoting the healthy and stable development of the real-estate market and advancing sustainable urbanization. The above conclusions have practical significance for China and other developing countries to coordinate population and urban development in the process of rapid urbanization.

Highlights

  • With the advancement of new urbanization in recent years, the level of urbanization in China has rapidly increased

  • The results of the cross-sectional data showed that a 1% increase in cross-regional population mobility and urban–rural migration resulted in a 0.701% and 0.343% increase in housing prices, respectively; Wang and Chen [56] used the Chinese provincial data to construct a panel vector autoregressive model (PVAR) to study the interaction between population migration and housing prices, and the results showed that the range of housing prices affected by population migration in the eastern region fluctuated more significantly than in the western region, and the population migration in the eastern region had a greater impact on the development of the real-estate industry

  • Model I estimated the data for all sample cities, and the results showed that the population inflow was positively correlated with the urban housing prices, and passed the test at the 1% significance level, which was in line with theoretical expectations; with a population inflow rate increase of 1%, the urban housing prices would increase by 0.31%; in addition, real-estate investment (REINV) and income level (AVINC) significantly promoted urban housing prices, and both passed a 1% significant test

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Summary

Introduction

With the advancement of new urbanization in recent years, the level of urbanization in China has rapidly increased. The resident population of China’s cities and towns was 813.47 million at the end of 2017, accounting for 58.52% of the total population [1]. Compared with 44.90% in 2007, the urbanization rate has increased by 13.62% in the past ten years. Behind the rapid development of urbanization is the continuous growth of China’s migrant population. Statistics from the National Health and Family Planning Commission show that China’s migrant population was 244 million in 2017, accounting for 17.55% of the total population, of which 63.50% was inter-provincial [2]. The average selling prices of residential housing in China rose from 3576 yuan/m2 in 2008 to 7614 yuan/m2 in 2017 (Figure 1), an increase of 113% in the past decade

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