HomeNewsOpinionIs housing really the business of government?

Is housing really the business of government?

Urbanisation and changing demographics have pushed the demand for housing far beyond current supply

May 16, 2017 / 10:43 IST
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Rahul Nahar

India is the grip of a housing crisis. The country’s urban housing shortage is estimated at approximately 19 million households, and, with another 230 million Indians projected to move to urban centres within the next 20 years, this shortage is set to deteriorate further. This problem is replicated on a global scale. If nothing is done to tackle the shortage, this will leave the next generation priced out of the market and an estimated 889 million people living in slums by 2020.

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Why are we facing such a dire situation? Put simply, we are not building enough affordable homes. Urbanisation and changing demographics have pushed the demand for housing far beyond current supply. This situation has been exacerbated by the widening gap between the promises of governments to address the housing crisis, and their continued inability to do so.

One reason successive governments have failed to adequately solve the housing crisis has been a failure to think beyond the age-old old policy for the government to build more social homes. This policy has been proven to fail time and time again, however. In the UK, for example, where the supply of social housing is greater than anywhere in Europe, there remains a shortage of 240,000 homes every year.