Economy

China’s fastest-growing city Xian hub for aviation and defense

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Robotic arms spray paint a car body shell at the BYD Automobile Company Limited Xi’an plant on December 25, 2019 in Xi’an, Shaanxi Province of China.

Yuan Jingzhi | Visual China Group | Getty Images

BEIJING — The Chinese city of Xi’an remains a bright spot of growth in a country still recovering from the shock of the coronavirus pandemic.

Xi’an is best known to many for its Terracotta Warriors — an army of clay sculptures from ancient times. Located in central China well over 800 miles from the east coast metropolis of Shanghai, Xi’an is one of the last major urban areas before the poorer regions of the west.

The city’s GDP grew 4.5% in the first three quarters of the year, the fastest of all major Chinese cities, according to Wind Information. Beijing city grew 0.1%, while Shanghai contracted 0.3% during the first nine months of the year, the data showed. National GDP is set for roughly 2% growth this year.

Xi’an’s rapid expansion reflects how local governments are trying to boost growth, while revealing questions about sustainability.

Tech

Samsung has invested more than $10 billion in Xi’an, where the company’s semiconductor unit has facilities for research and manufacturing. The South Korean company is reportedly stepping up its investment and sent hundreds of more engineers to the city earlier this year, according to The Korea Herald.

Some of the Chinese high-tech companies located in Xi’an include aircraft parts manufacturer Chenxi Aviation, AVIC XAC — a commercial aircraft manufacturer tied to state-owned defense and aerospace conglomerate AVIC — and Western Superconductor, which manufacturers titanium products and researches applications in aerospace, medical and other industries.

Housing

In China’s development system, a population increase allows the local government to extend the city limits, get more land allocated for construction and make money from property deals, Zhao said.

Reflecting high demand — and likely speculation — Xi’an’s house prices soared a cumulative 46% in the three years through 2019, according to the Sweetome Hurun Global Price Index. The annual report by rental vacation home operator Sweetome and wealth tracker Hurun Report found that Xi’an retained the third spot globally last year by price increase, up 19.7%.

The gains have continued this year, albeit at a slower pace.

Prices for newly constructed commercial housing in Xi’an rose 7.1% in November from a year ago, according to the National Bureau of Statistics. That’s among the 10 fastest paces for 70 large and medium-sized cities.

The city’s influx of buyers and high-rise developments has attracted too many speculators, causing an unsustainable price bubble, while creating traffic and safety issues for an overly crowded city, said Yuan Guoqian, president of Xi’an Xiaoyuan Technology. The company’s research advocates that cities pursue more sustainable expansion through two or three-story townhouses.

Yuan said the idea is beginning to find some traction, and that a project in the Weinan region on the northeastern outskirts of Xi’an has nearly completed phase one, thanks to support from local authorities. “They understand no one wants this kind of high-density living,” he said, according to a CNBC translation of his Mandarin-language remarks.

Growth challenges

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