4.6 Article

An Analysis of Transaction Costs Involved in the Urban Village Redevelopment Process in China

Journal

BUILDINGS
Volume 12, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/buildings12050692

Keywords

urban village; transaction characteristics; transaction costs; institutional arrangements; China

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [72104090]
  2. Philosophy and Social Sciences of Guangdong Province [GD19YGL16]
  3. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities [22JNZS21, 21JNZS21, 19JNQM11]
  4. 2019 Innovation Projects of General Universities in Guangdong Province [2019WTSCX002]

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This study analyzes the transaction costs of urban village redevelopment projects in China from the perspective of transaction cost economics, finding that high levels of transaction costs in these projects have essential implications for process efficiency. Policymakers need to consider these costs and use hybrid institutional arrangements to enhance the efficiency and sustainability of policies.
A well-designed institutional arrangement for urban village redevelopment projects (UVRPs) must consider transaction costs, but academic papers discussing it from the perspective of transaction cost economics are lacking. This paper applies theory of transaction cost economics to analyse the types and sizes of transaction costs and who bears these costs during redevelopment when implementing UVRPs in China. This paper finds that transactions in UVRPs have high asset specificity, high uncertainty and low frequency, which easily results in high levels of transaction costs. Based on 439 UVRPs collected from seven cities, this paper finds that UVRPs implemented with top-down institutional arrangements remain prevalent in China. Based on semi-structured interviews with participating parties, this paper proves that the sizes and types of transaction costs and the distribution of these costs borne by different participating parties vary with the change of stage under dissimilar institutional arrangements. This implies that a high level of transaction costs at one stage does not necessarily mean the costs stay high at another stage. Transaction costs have essential implications for process efficiency, so policymakers need to consider transaction costs and use hybrid institutional arrangements to enhance the efficiency and sustainability of policies.

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