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What does rural collective construction land mean?

What does rural collective construction land mean? Rural construction land refers to township (town) village construction land, and township (town) village construction land refers to land invested or raised by township (town) village collective economic organizations and rural individuals for various non-agricultural construction. It mainly includes: land for public welfare undertakings and public facilities in townships (towns) and villages, and residential land for rural residents. Rural collective construction land is divided into three categories: homestead, public facilities, public welfare land and business land.

According to the law, the land in the city belongs to the state. Land in rural areas and suburban areas belongs to farmers' collectives, except for those that are owned by the state according to the law; Homestead, private plots and private hills are collectively owned by farmers.

The real estate market reform has reached a critical juncture, and the rural land price reform and circulation channels are undergoing profound changes. On June 6, 2009 165438+ 10/6, Xia Aguo, Deputy Secretary-General of Zhejiang Provincial Committee and Director of Provincial Agricultural Office, told the media that the Ministry of Land and Resources had decided to carry out a pilot reform of rural land consolidation in Zhejiang. As early as New Year's Day 20 10, Zhejiang will promote rural collective land to enter the market in the whole province, and gradually realize the healthy transfer mode of "the same place, the same price and the same rights" with urban state-owned land. However, Zhejiang later revised "rural collective land" into "rural collective construction land".

Rural collective construction land came into being in the agricultural cooperative movement in the early 1950s. It is an agricultural socialist economic organization in which farmers voluntarily unite to put all their means of production (land, large farm tools and farm animals) under collective ownership in order to implement the transformation of socialist public ownership, collectively organize agricultural production and management, and collectively work for farmers, each according to his ability and distribution according to his work. After that, the farmers' own houses occupied land and the parts that did not become cultivated land, including woodland, homestead and wasteland around the houses.

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