From Wahaha Zongqinghou s free house division to see China s affordable housing system

Mondo Finance Updated on 2024-03-01

Zong Qinghou, the founder and leader of Wahaha Group, passed away on February 25, 2024 at the age of 79 due to ineffective medical treatment. Mr. Zong Qinghou, an entrepreneur in a private enterprise, has built health care housing for employees, and a society should have its own homes.

Housing is a book focusing on the theory and practice of affordable housing construction in China. It conducts a systematic study of housing security in China from both theoretical and practical levels. At the theoretical level, this book deeply explores the theoretical basis and economic, social and cultural value of housing security, and introduces the content, characteristics and enlightenment of housing policies and security systems in major market economy countries. On this basis, it proposes a theoretical framework for China's housing security system. At the practical level, the book summarizes the development process, main measures and achievements of China's housing system and housing security, objectively analyzes the problems existing in development, puts forward suggestions and countermeasures to solve them, and looks forward to the development trend of housing security in the future. In addition, the book also selects the good practices and experiences of some regions for typical case analysis.

The content of this book is comprehensive, the system is complete, the structure is rigorous, the analysis is thorough, and the point of view is clear. It is not only the first attempt to conduct systematic research on housing security in China, but also a bold theoretical innovation and pragmatic practical summary. Many of the views and suggestions in the book have an important reference and reference role in further strengthening the work of housing security, improving the housing security system, and standardizing the construction and management of affordable housing.

In addition, there is a book entitled "Housing for Living: Practices and Explorations in Shanghai and Singapore", which focuses on the exploration of housing development and housing-related policies in Shanghai and Singapore, and puts forward the experiences and lessons that deserve the attention of domestic housing system reform. Divided into 11 chapters, the book is rich and vivid, and I believe it will bring inspiration to domestic housing policy researchers and formulators.

Overall, "Living" and its related books provide a comprehensive perspective on housing security in China, both theoretical analysis and practical experience, and can provide valuable reference and inspiration for those who study real estate in Singapore.

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