Last week’s
column set out my principal queries as to our nation’s housing
policy and the intervening events have only put those into better
focus.
Key points –
‘Cheaper Govt Houses’
in the Sunday Guardian of 27th June
featured an interview with Dr. Roodal Moonilal, Minister of Housing
and the Environment. The Minister touched on some of the key issues
and confirmed that
“…Some people
simply cannot afford the market value of the homes. As a result,
Government is looking to provide a further subsidy to assist with
the purchasing of homes. I intend to take a proposal to Cabinet to
consider the price reduction of the housing units…”
- see
link
.
There was no
mention of rented housing in that article, so it seems that the new
Minister has adopted the existing policy of preferring to sell the
new homes built by the Housing Development Corporation (HDC). In
addition, he is proposing to increase the housing subsidy. An
important correction is that HDC houses are not sold at ‘market
value‘ as the Minister implied. Market value is the
amount the new home could sell for on the open market and the HDC
offers the new homes to applicants at a lower price.
What is Housing Subsidy?
This is an
important aspect of the housing policy discussion and these are the
basic points -
·
Public funding
– To create new homes, the HDC has to spend public money for land
acquisition, professional fees and cost of construction – these are
‘first costs’ for new homes, but there are other significant costs
of getting a needy family to move in.
·
Housing subsidy
– For example, if the market value of a new HDC home is $900,000 and
those homes are sold to applicants for $425,000, the housing subsidy
in that case is $475,000. Please note that I am not relating the
sale price to the cost of production of the new home – that is a
mistaken approach, because it ignores the opportunity cost of the
investment decision to sell at that reduced price. Effectively, this
ignores the market to the detriment of the taxpayer. Even in the
case of rented housing, the same basis would apply, with the
difference between the market rent and the actual rent being the
weekly housing subsidy.
·
The allocation of
Housing Subsidy –
Fidelis Heights at
Bates Trace in St. Augustine is a new HDC development of townhouses
near to UWI – in my view, the homes there are middle-income units
which should not have been built by the HDC. In that case the
housing subsidy per unit is in excess of $850,000. In view of the
desperate national housing shortage and the scarcity of resources,
it was a grievious mis-allocation of both public capital and housing
subsidy to have embarked on this scheme. In the examples cited by
the new Minister, the housing subsidy is far lower. The people who
purchased units at Fidelis Heights got them at between $780,000 to
$900,000. I am also aware that those homes were allocated without
reference to housing need – i.e. some of them went to single people,
without children. To put it plainly, there is no case for allocating
$850,000 in housing subsidy to a single person, when there are
entire families in greater need, who are not catered for by the
system. There is a very poor quality of discussion on the issue of
housing subsidy. That is because of the system of cost-based
pricing, as mentioned above, which error is compounded by the sparse
references in the official statistics. I have only been able to
unearth a single official attempt to quantify housing subsidy in the
‘2010 Draft Estimates of
Development Programme‘ - see
link
‘Provision of Housing Subsidies at Greenfield sites’ is stated, at
line H 003 to be $3,058,863. I am not saying that there is a poor
understanding of the role of housing subsidy. That would be untrue,
since the people who are manipulating the system all understand the
real value of housing subsidy very well.
·
Rent control
– ‘Rent subsidies for
tertiary students’, also in Sunday’s Guardian – see
link
– featured a discussion on the housing situation affecting 14,000
UWI students.
[Minister of Science, Technology and Tertiary Education (MSTTE)
Fazal] Karim said while the university has established mechanisms to
register landlords “there exist no mechanisms to monitor prices,
ensure quality accommodation, minimise security anxiety or seek the
interests of the landlords and students.” In the near future, Karim
said, the MSTTE and the Health Ministry will establish a committee
that will make recommendations to establish mechanisms for the
provision of subsidies “on rents to all students residing in the
region and who are registered at tertiary institutions in the area.”
It seems from his
statements that the MSTTE is proposing a rental subsidy to all
tertiary students, whatever their means. In a situation of scarce
resources, that type of policy can have inequitable consequences,
since some of these students are not needy at all.
The Minister of
Legal Affairs, Prakash Ramadhar, attending as MP for the area, said
-
…what adds to the
problem is the lapsing by the Rent Assessment Board. “We nationally
had to debate the issue if this country would go into a free market
in terms of rent or rent restriction.”
Ramadhar said he
would like to see free market forces determine rents.
So here we
have the paradox deepening, with the Minister responsible for the rent
control system seeming to say that he is against those controls.
The outlook for the state’s intervention
into the housing arena is confusing, to say the least. Confusion is the
ideal atmosphere to breed under-performance and corruption.
Our needy citizens deserve better. This
entire debate should be to create reasonable, redistributive and
sustainable housing policies for our nation.
The allocation of scarce housing subsidy
must be reported and improved, so that the most needy receive the most
subsidy.
Next week, we expand to include questions
as to how many of the HDC houses are occupied by the legitimate tenants?
Are steps being taken to deal with those who have broken the terms of
their tenancy? Also, some discussion on the use of re-purchase schemes
as another way to create extra units of housing.
Afra Raymond is
Managing Director of Raymond & Pierre Limited and President of the
Institute of Surveyors of Trinidad & Tobago. Comments can be sent to
afra@raymondandpierre.com.