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How China’s billion savers embarked on a household debt binge

With property the only reliable investment channel, leverage and risk are growing

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People walk past a billboard advertising a new housing complex outside a construction site in Beijing in May last year. Photo: AFP
Frank Tangin Beijing

Bonnie Cao, a PR worker for an investment company, used to be a typical Chinese saver, putting half her monthly income into a bank deposit account.

But that all changed at the start of this year when Cao and her army officer husband decided to buy a flat in Beijing.

The studio flat in downtown Beijing emptied the couple’s 400,000 yuan (US$59,000) life savings and they also incurred a debt of 1.35 million yuan to parents, colleagues and classmates to muster the remainder of the 35 per cent down payment. The rest of the purchase was financed by bank loans, with monthly mortgage repayments of about 20,000 yuan for 30 years.

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But Cao said she felt lucky they bought their own flat in the Chinese capital because just a few days after their deal was completed, the city government imposed more restrictions on property purchases.

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“Home prices rose so scarily in the past year that we are afraid we could never afford a unit in Beijing,” the 30-year-old said, explaining their decision to take on so much debt.

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