Mumbai's Dharavi is claimed to be the biggest slum in India - Asia - World -
what have you.....*You bet, it has competition!!

* While the homeless and poor live in hutments and slums in India, 20
Million People Live Underground in China



[image: 
china]<http://www.impactlab.net/2011/01/31/20-million-people-live-underground-in-china/china-9/>



*Ordinary Chinese people priced out of China’s property market.*

To understand how far ordinary Chinese have been priced out of their
country’s property market, you need to look not upwards at the Beijing’s
shimmering high-rise skyline, but down, far below the bustling streets where
nearly 20m people live and work. There, in the city’s vast network of unused
air defence bunkers, as many as a million people live in small, windowless
rooms that rent for £30 to £50 a month, which is as much as many of the
city’s army of migrant labourers can afford. (Pics)



[image: 7 living underground in china 547]



*Living underground in China*

In a Beijing suburb, beneath one of the thousands of faceless residential
tower blocks that have carpeted the city’s peripheries in a decade-long
building frenzy, one of Beijing’s “bomb shelter hoteliers”, as they are
known, agrees to show us his wares.

Passing under a green sign proclaiming “Air Defence Basement”, Mr Zhao leads
us down two flights of stairs to the network of corridors and rooms that
were designed to offer sanctuary in the event of war or disaster.

“We have two sizes of room,” he says, stepping past heaps of clutter
belonging to residents, most of whom work in the nearby cloth wholesale
market. “The small ones [6ft by 9ft] are 300 yuan [£30] the big ones [15ft
by 6ft] are 500 yuan.”

Beijing is estimated to have 30 square miles of tunnels and basements, some
constructed after the Sino-Soviet split of 1969, when Mao’s China feared a
Soviet missile strike, and many more constructed since to act as more modern
emergency refuges.



[image: 7 living underground in china 546]



The fact Mr Zhao can easily rent out 150 such rooms, with the connivance of
the city’s Civil Defence Bureau with whom he has signed a five-year contract
and invested nearly £150,000, is testament to China’s massive unfulfilled
demand for affordable housing.

“Some 80pc of our tenants are girls working in the wholesale market and the
rest are peddlers selling vegetables or running sidewalk snack booths,” he
adds. “There are dozens of similar air defence basement projects in
residential communities. In this area, they say 100,000 live underground.”

Checking out the price of property above ground it is not difficult to see
why. To buy a small flat (860 sq ft) in the tower block above – a typically
grim, grey concrete affair – currently costs more than £200,000. In a city
where the average monthly salary is 4,000 yuan, the average person would
take 50 years to buy such an apartment, assuming they saved every penny they
earned.



[image: 7 living underground in china 542]



At the market, Xiao Wang, a sales girl who is one of the basement dwellers,
says she lives in a small basement room with a friend. They have no kitchen
and only the use of a stinking public toilet upstairs.

“I can earn 4,000 yuan on a good month with commissions,” she says, “but
sometimes it is only 2,000. I could maybe afford something a little better,
but I need to save money so this is how I have to live.”

Such vast discrepancies between house prices and earnings are creating
social and economic difficulties for China’s government – the discontented
poor can’t find a decent place to live while the rich look to store their
wealth in a speculative, bubble-prone property market. Not for nothing did
Li Daokui, an adviser to China’s central bank, tell the World Economic Forum
in Davos last week that rising property prices were the “biggest danger” to
China’s economy.



[image: 7 living underground in china 545]



With inflation and wage pressures also mounting, a growing number of
investors are starting to question the long-term sustainability of China’s
investment-heavy growth model. A survey of global investors by Bloomberg
last week found that 45pc of them expect a financial crisis in China within
the next five years, with another 40pc anticipating a crisis after 2016.

China’s government has given notice that it understands the risks of a
property bubble, throwing another bucket of cold water on to the market last
week, announcing new restrictions including minimum deposits on second homes
of 60pc and a standing property tax in Shanghai and Chongqing.

However, many analysts remain sceptical that the curbs, allied to further
interest rate rises expected this quarter, will do much more than stabilise
prices which rose by 26pc in Shanghai and 12pc in Beijing last year despite
an earlier round of cooling measures.



[image: 7 living underground in china 544]



Goldman Sachs said it felt the impact of the curbs would be “short-lived”
while Citigroup said the measures, while “harsh”, would not cause a sharp
pullback in property prices, but at best would stop prices going up much
further this year.

Those with a bearish outlook, such as Michael Pettis, professor of
financeat Beijing’s Peking University, question whether China’s
leaders will dare
hit the brakes hard enough when so much of China’s economy relies on
property investment to hit its politically sacrosanct annual growth targets.

Even last year’s soaring retail figures – sales of furniture rose by 37.2pc,
household appliances by 27.7pc – appear to flatter the strength of China’s
real economy, he argues in a note, since they are “as much an indication of
soaring real estate investment as of rising consumption”.

Others point to the low level of mortgages on Chinese property and the
underlying demand for property in a country that will urbanise 200m people
in the next 20 years and argue that the bull market has a long way to run
yet.



[image: 7 living underground in china 543]



But for Beijing’s bunker residents who will never be able to afford a house,
no matter how far prices fall, such considerations are superfluous, so long
as China’s government does more to manage their rising discontent. This
year, in a sign that it is getting serious about low-cost housing after
years of paying lip-service, Beijing’s municipal government announced it was
putting 200,000 new low-cost rental homes on the market, compared with
10,000 last year.

“We don’t ask for much,” said a roadside vegetable seller who also lives in
a nearby basement shelter, “but the government must give us somewhere to
live, because without us labourers what is going to support the Beijing
economy?”

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