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Affordable housing for all by 2022: How far are we from the target?

The government had set an ambitious target of providing affordable housing for all by 2022.

February 06, 2020 / 19:09 IST
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Has our present government, which had set an ambitious target of providing affordable housing for all by 2022 in its 2019 budget, done enough to help the real estate industry to come out of the woods in its budget proposals last week? With the country itself passing through the worst of economic slowdown, a revival in the housing industry would have helped the overall economy regain its growth momentum. Of course, there is some encouraging news that points to green shoots, with the banks reporting some improvement in demand for home loans. However, there could have been more bold initiatives that could have lifted the sentiments in India's residential real estate industry from doom to gloom.

According to industry experts Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman, who even prodded the banks for not effectively passing on the RBI rate cut benefits to home loan customers in full could have been more forthcoming when it comes to opening the purse strings for the homebuyers. They point out that the expectations from the Union Budget for the next financial year have to be taken into consideration against the backdrop of the real state of the real estate sector and the government’s ambitious goal of providing housing for all by 2022. With the deadline fast approaching and the numbers not showing up that much enthusiasm among homebuyers, the Budget could have done a lot more to lift the mood. A one per cent increase in home sales per year, as was reported in 2019, is definitely not going to help the government achieve the target.

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One has to keep in mind that India’s real estate sector has come a long way, marking a paradigm shift from government-provided housing to market-provided housing. With the government also pushing for market-provided housing, it’s time that the government take initiatives to consolidate the gains of the market and the institutional infrastructure, and ramp up financing and construction on a rapid and mass scale. The overhang of incomplete projects and unsold inventory continues to pose a challenge to the housing as well as the financial sector, even as liquidity concerns along with credit risks are palpable and buyers are feeling left in the lurch.

The real estate industry, in the run-up to the Budget, had urged the government to reduce the interest rates on home loans to 7 per cent and increase the income tax deduction for interest paid on housing loan to Rs 5 lakh to help revive demand for home loans. Industry body National Real Estate Development Council (Naredco) had also asked the government to redefine affordable housing to extend tax benefits to bigger houses that cost more than Rs 45 lakh. A spurt in demand for home loans among the high-income groups, according to market experts often always percolates to better demand among the middle-income group and lower-income group, with buyers often letting go the old and relocating to the new homes. Presenting its wish list, Naredco had said: “Fiscal stimulus to the real estate sector will have a manifold effect on 269 allied industries with multi-dimensional impact on enhancing the GDP growth inclusive of employment creation… In this Budget 2020, the Indian real estate sector expects a holistic solution rather than piecemeal solutions.”