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- Newsgroups: soc.culture.china
- Path: sparky!uunet!gatech!psuvax1!echeng
- From: echeng@phys.psu.edu (Eddie Cheng)
- Subject: Re: Living costs in China
- Message-ID: <C19pA9.C7w@cs.psu.edu>
- Sender: news@cs.psu.edu (Usenet)
- Nntp-Posting-Host: psuphys1.phys.psu.edu
- Organization: Penn State, Department of Physics
- References: <lltvkrINN513@exodus.Eng.Sun.COM> <C19Kxn.AD7@news.cso.uiuc.edu>
- Date: Fri, 22 Jan 1993 18:13:20 GMT
- Lines: 45
-
- In article <C19Kxn.AD7@news.cso.uiuc.edu> hay36859@dcl-nxt09.cso.uiuc.edu (Haidong Anthony Ye) writes:
- >
- >Don't know about other people, but I just went back to Beijing couple
- >weeks ago, and most profs and teachers in the university I know of can
- >make RMB 600-800, and engineers makes even more, perhaps RMB 1,000/month
- >Of course, most of the money comes from "the second profession", the
- >standard salary is still around RMB 200/month
-
- This is always a problem for "outsiders" to access the realistic
- info on things like living conditions in a different society. Remember
- that for about two years, TV pictures here repeatedly show empty shelves
- in almost every store in (now former) Soviet Union. You probably would
- wonder how the people there survived. The thing is, many people there
- get their stuffs from other sources (like distributed by their working
- "units").
-
- The same goes to Beijing nowadays. If you look at the salary
- figures and then comapre with the market prices, you can't imagine
- how people there manage their lives. But the reality that people
- mostly survived and even live reasonably well should have told you
- that there are more things going on.
-
- I have come to know some professors whose take-home money is
- almost ten times of their salary.
-
- >
- >This piece of info is some how outdated in Beijing. I know many
- >university profs and engineers have savings from RMB 50,000-100,000
- >some have cars already, and others plan to buy one in the near future,
- >especially those living in uptown. Buying houses are not as popular
- >in Beijing, but it is becoming more and more popular, even though most
- >people buy their own apartment which was rent previously, so the house
- >is somewhat obselete anyway.
-
- There is an intrinsic problem with selling houses to renters.
- Traditionally all houses are built and managed by a certain "unit",
- which resembles a small society. For example, most of apartments for
- professors in Beida are in or near the campus. They can not simply
- auction them but have to sell them to the professors, otherwise the
- campus will be destroyed by other intruders. Professors are amart
- enough to understand this, so they are not eager to pay to own the
- apartments they can now rent cheaply anyway.
-
-
- Eddie
-