Analyzing Stakeholder Relationships for Construction Land Reduction Projects in Shanghai, China
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methods
2.1. Study Area
2.2. Case Presentation
2.2.1. Zhuqiao Town
2.2.2. Zhujiajiao Town
2.3. Case Investigation
3. Results
3.1. Preference Analysis of Key Stakeholders
- Interest preferences of the Shanghai Municipal Government: resource allocation, ecological protection. The Shanghai Municipal Government represents more interest subjects; thus in the reduction of inefficient construction land, it pursues both resource allocation optimization in terms of sustainable social development and land use structural transformation, and includes ecological protection pursuits such as environmental improvement and supplementary ecological land. The Shanghai government’s interest objective function is the pursuit of resource allocation. As China enters a new normal of economic development, with its growth rate, structural adjustment and transformation, and development momentum shifting, Shanghai, which is at the intersection of the national “One Belt, One Road” and Yangtze River Economic Belt development strategies, has seen particularly profound changes in its external environment and its development stage characteristics. The status quo of the scarcity of land resources and sloppy utilization can no longer meet the needs of urbanization development, and forcing the transformation of economic development with the transformation of land utilization is urgently needed. Thus, in the reduction of inefficient construction land, the primary preference of the Shanghai government is to integrate and optimize urban and rural spaces in the countryside of the metropolis, and to promote industrial concentration, agglomeration, and intensive development. The second is the pursuit of ecological protection. The reduction of inefficient construction land is needed for Shanghai to support ecological construction. The optimal layout of ecological land and construction land space is key to coordinating good economic development and ecological construction. Construction land reduction reclaims part of the construction land into arable land, thus increasing the quality of ecological land by improving the quality of arable land and composite use into forest land.
- Interest preferences of Shanghai district-level governments: expanding urban expansion space and creating a model for industrial transformation and development. In the reduction of inefficient construction land, Shanghai’s district-level governments mainly have three interest preferences. First, to undertake the quantization reduction tasks of higher-level governments and assign them to the town-level governments under their jurisdiction, and to carry out the administrative tasks of optimizing the allocation of inefficient construction land resources and improving land use efficiency. Second, to obtain construction land indicators to support urbanization in the region with the promotion of inefficient construction land reduction, in order to break through the land resource constraints and provide space for urban development. Third, to solve the issue of higher requirements for transformation and upgrading faced by economically developed areas in the late industrialization stage or the developed economy stage, to create a high-level model of modern industrial development, and to achieve a substantial increase in regional industrial development.
- The interest preferences of Shanghai town-level governments: promoting industrial upgrading and development, and achieving a good social governance environment. In the reduction of inefficient construction land, Shanghai town-level governments mainly have two interest preferences. Firstly, to let as many local enterprises as possible participate in the implementation of the quantization project, to rely on the quantization to demolish inefficient enterprises, to free up space indicators for attracting high-tech enterprises, and to obtain more local fiscal revenue. Secondly, to achieve good social governance in certain regional rural areas and improve the state of local public service facilities, in order to maintain a good local government image and gain recognition from higher-level government and society.
- Interest preferences of rural collective organizations: rural social stability and growing collective economy. The rural collective organizations are the owners and direct managers of the reduced land and are the most directly responsible for undertaking the task of reduction, undertaking the service and coordination work within the countryside, and playing an important role as a communication bridge between the government, enterprise owners, and villagers. In the process of reduction, four interest preferences of rural collective organizations were expressed. Firstly, to complete the quantization task assigned by the higher government. Secondly, to strive for more quantization funds to make up for the loss of financial income due to reduction. Thirdly, to solve the employment problem, whereby local villagers are unemployed due to quantization, to maintain social stability and steadiness. Fourthly, to improve the living environment and the construction of community public service facilities, and protect people’s livelihood.
- Interest preferences of enterprise owners: not to be reduced, compensation for reduction funds, and opportunities for enterprise development. As land users, enterprise owners were direct victims of inefficient construction land quantization, and their biggest interest demand was not to be quantized. At the same time, the majority of enterprise owners in the process of being reduced have two main concerns. Firstly, to obtain as much financial compensation as possible, in order to lay the financial foundation for transferring to the Jiangsu and Zhejiang regions for subsequent development. Secondly, to obtain inclined enterprise support. Most of the enterprises in Shanghai are stationed in industrial parks and face the pressure of higher rents more than before; it is therefore in the interest of enterprise owners to appeal to the government to provide specific tax and rent policy support.
- Villagers’ interest preferences: employment and resettlement issues, ecological environment improvement, and community construction. Since the reduction was mainly about the dismantling of township enterprises, the first concern of villagers was solving the employment problem after the dismantling of enterprises. The biggest impact of the reduction on villagers was the loss of employment opportunities and the main source of income, which directly affected their economic conditions. Secondly, villagers were concerned about improving the rural environment after the reduction. In addition, they were also concerned about whether the reduction could bring about improved living conditions and public facilities, which was directly related to their quality of life.
3.2. Analysis of the Relationship between the Main Stakeholders
3.2.1. Between City, District and Town Governments: Fitting and Violating
“We put real money into it, but as a result, the financial resources can’t keep up, and the indicators are not ours, but just give us pressure and make us work and bear the debt…”(Zhuqiao Town Government interview, 4 November 2020)
3.2.2. Between Town Government and Village Collectives and Villagers: Cooperation and Conflict
“The reduction does not benefit the village, not a single penny. Just see the boss take the money and go away, the villagers have nothing, but instead bear the long-term industrial production caused by the river and air pollution. The golden mountains and silver mountains are gone, and the green water and green mountains are not what they used to be”.
3.2.3. Between Village Collectives and Villagers: Dependence and Contradiction
3.2.4. Villagers and Entrepreneur: Support and Deprivation
3.2.5. Village Collectives and Entrepreneur: Help and Resistance
“… If it is efficient industrial land, we guide it to the formal industrial park … If it is not quite in line with the industrial orientation of our district, the collaborative unit is responsible for helping them to Jiangsu or Anhui and other places industrial parks for development”.
4. Discussion
4.1. Comparison of Two Typical Cases
4.2. Key Factors Affecting the Relationship between the Parties’ Interests
- 1.
- Management of quantified reduction index.
- 2.
- Increased cost of reduction.
- 3.
- The absence of village cadres with professional knowledge.
4.3. Suggestions for Optimization of Construction Land Reduction Policy
- 1.
- Build a long-term “blood-making mechanism” in all aspects.
- 2.
- Improve the composition of the organization of reduction.
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Questions | Villagers’ Answers | Zhuqiao Town | Zhujiajiao Town |
---|---|---|---|
Support | 5 | 59.30% | 75% |
4 | 18.50% | 25% | |
3 | 11.10% | 0 | |
2 | 11.10% | 0 | |
1 | 0 | 0 | |
Satisfaction | 5 | 62.99% | 50% |
4 | 22.20% | 25% | |
3 | 14.81% | 25% | |
2 | 0 | 0 | |
1 | 0 | 0 | |
Understanding | 5 | 22.20% | 0 |
4 | 62.96% | 58.30% | |
3 | 14.81% | 41.70% | |
2 | 0 | 0 | |
1 | 0 | 0 | |
Is reduction good for rural development? | 5 | 55.56% | 50% |
4 | 33.33% | 25% | |
3 | 7.41% | 25% | |
2 | 3.70% | 0 | |
1 | 0 | 0 | |
Change in economic conditions | get better | 85.19% | 91.70% |
get worse | 14.81% | 8.30% | |
Change in social conditions | get better | 88.89% | 75% |
get worse | 11.11% | 25% | |
Change in ecological conditions | get better | 92.60% | 91.70% |
get worse | 7.40% | 8.30% | |
Should it be continued? | yes | 88.90% | 100% |
no | 11.10% | 0 |
Different Measures | Zhuqiao Town | Zhujiajiao Town |
---|---|---|
Ownership and benefit distribution of reduced land | The town government is in charge | Specialized land company was established |
With regard to the check before acceptance of the reduction | No self-inspection | Took the three-level acceptance method of self-inspection, district-level, and municipal-level inspection |
On the protection of village collectives and villagers’ interests | One-off compensation | Established a township-village secondary collective asset supervision account |
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Lu, Z.; Xu, M.; Zhang, Z. Analyzing Stakeholder Relationships for Construction Land Reduction Projects in Shanghai, China. Land 2022, 11, 2170. https://doi.org/10.3390/land11122170
Lu Z, Xu M, Zhang Z. Analyzing Stakeholder Relationships for Construction Land Reduction Projects in Shanghai, China. Land. 2022; 11(12):2170. https://doi.org/10.3390/land11122170
Chicago/Turabian StyleLu, Zhaodi, Mengyao Xu, and Zhengfeng Zhang. 2022. "Analyzing Stakeholder Relationships for Construction Land Reduction Projects in Shanghai, China" Land 11, no. 12: 2170. https://doi.org/10.3390/land11122170
APA StyleLu, Z., Xu, M., & Zhang, Z. (2022). Analyzing Stakeholder Relationships for Construction Land Reduction Projects in Shanghai, China. Land, 11(12), 2170. https://doi.org/10.3390/land11122170