Showing posts with label apartment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label apartment. Show all posts

07 January 2009

Crime and Paranoia

Oh yes, it is nearly time for the year of the rat to become the year of the ox, and sure enough the period is heralded by the onset of the season of burglary and general theft. Even just among friends and work colleagues, I know of four people that have been the victims of burglary (or attempted burglary) in the past two weeks.

I always thought that Chinese burglars had a formidable task to contend with. Aside from the presumably harsh punishment that awaits if caught, how exactly do you go about breaking into a Chinese apartment? Maybe Xi'an is different to other places, I can't really remember, but a great number of apartments here have a big steel door. Seriously: from the outside, they look like prisons. Many apartment windows are shielded by thick metal bars. I would have thought it was extremely difficult to get inside, and yet it obviously still happens.


One thing I noticed recently concerned me slightly: Although I have one of these prison-style security doors, and I live on the 6th floor of my apartment block, my bedroom windows have no bars. But all five floors below me do have bars. Won't they just make it much easier for potential burglars to climb up to my windows? It's like a ready-made ladder. I found a thick wooden pole stuck down the side of my fridge - I sleep with it by the bed now :-/

08 December 2008

Rent, irrationality and beating the banks

Living in a fairly large Chinese city, I see my fair share of construction work going on. Fancy new apartment blocks, shiny new shopping malls. Nothing too strange about that, until you think about the the number of apartment blocks and shopping malls that are already lying empty. It seems logical to see something odd in the fact that people would waste an awful lot of time and money to erect a building that they arent going to make any money from.
There are a handful of such apartment blocks around the centre of the city in which I live, which appear to be completely vacant, or at most 10% occupied. I once enquired as to how much one of the apartments was, but it turned out to be rather beyond my price range. Being in China, I thought it might be worth my while haggling for a better price. After all, I argued, the apartments have been lying empty for months now, so surely accepting a lower rent from me was preferably to receiving no rent whatsoever? But it was not to be, and I gave up. Later, I was talking to some Chinese friends about this, and they told me that if I try again next month, the situation would be even worse, since the rental cost would probably be even higher than before. The argument for this is that the landlord would have to recoup the money that he'd lost on the previous months. So even though the rent was already too high for anyone to seriously consider, he'd keep rasing the price to cover his losses, thereby making the price even more outrageously high, ensuring that nobody would ever move in!
But I once read somewhere that the companies that build these things have little intention of actually selling them on and making money the conventional way. I forget the exact details of the method, but it goes something like this: The company applies for a bank loan of, for simplicity's sake, 2 million yuan to pay for the construction of a new building. They go ahead with this this 2-million-yuan building, but in fact they only spend 1 million on its construction, and the rest... disappears. When the building is complete but remains unsold/doesn't turn a profit, there is some kind of clause by which the company can default on the bank loan, and the bank simply takes back the building, which is supposedly worth 2 million yuan. The bank is reasonably happy - they've got an asset instead of their cash. But they won't be as happy as the building company owners - the fraudsters have just pocketed a cool 1 million yuan.