Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

PM’S housing scheme gets tepid response from the middle class

- Moushumi Das Gupta moushumi.gupta@hindustant­imes.com ■ ■

NEWDELHI: A little over a year after the government expanded the ambit of its Pradhan Mantri Awas Yojana (PMAY) to include the middle class (with annual income between ₹6 lakh and ₹18 lakh), the response has been lukewarm.

According to ministry of housing and urban affairs figures, since January 2017, when PMAY was opened to the middle income category, till the first week of April, only 27,000 beneficiar­ies have availed interest subsidy on loans for constructi­on/acquisitio­n of house. At the time of launch, the ministry had said that it intends to target 50,000 people from the middle income category in 2017-18 under the scheme.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi had in December 2016 announced two new components of credit-linked subsidy to help the middle class, who till then were not included in the NDA government’s flagship housing programme.

As part of the scheme, those with an annual income of up to ₹12 lakh can avail a four percentage point interest subsidy on a loan of ₹9 lakh, while those with an income up to ₹18 lakh would get an interest subsidy of three percentage point on a loan of ₹12 lakh. In contrast, the number of beneficiar­ies under the Economical­ly Weaker Section/low Income Group (with annual income of ₹6 lakh), who were included under PMAY from the very beginning in 2015, is much higher at 1.13 lakh.

Housing sector experts blame the tepid response to a slew of factors including poor awareness oft the scheme, stringent eligibilit­y criteria, and the state of the real estate market.

Vaijinath MG, chief general manager, State Bank of India, and head of the real estate and housing business unit at India’s largest lender, said: “With many projects getting stalled and their costs rising, the confidence of buyers in the housing market was shaken. People were not inclined to buy houses in underconst­ruction properties. But with awareness growing and the scheme getting a little more inclusive, the numbers are likely to increase.”

In the middle-income category, the maximum number of applicants whose loans have been approved are from Maharashtr­a (7,276) followed by Gujarat (3,435), Karnataka (2,630), Uttar Pradesh (2,524) and Andhra Pradesh (1,280). According to the housing ministry, in the middleinco­me category, of the ₹5,869 crore of loans that have been disbursed, the central subsidy is to the tune of ₹564 crore; in the economical­ly weaker section and lower income category, of the ₹11,812 crore of loans disbursed so far, the central subsidy is ₹2,441 crore.

Sriram Kalyanaram­an, managing director and CEO of National Housing Bank (NHB), regulator of all housing finance companies, said another reason for poor demand for the scheme in the middle-income group could be the provision in the scheme that those having an existing pucca house cannot apply.

“During our interactio­n with banks, we were told this could be one of the reasons. A person belonging to the middle income group, even if he has ancestral property in his village, is ineligible. Inadequate last mile cus- tomer education was another issue that was flagged. Overall, the entire offtake is low because of sentiment. In some states RERA is yet to be implemente­d,” said Kalyanaram­an. His reference is to the The Real Estate (Regulation and Developmen­t) Act, 2016, that was passed to protect home buyers. Most states are yet to appoint full-time independen­t regulators under the Act.

To help homebuyers from the middle income category, in November 2017 the government had tweaked the guidelines and increased the carpet area of houses eligible for interest waivers. The carpet area was increased from 968 sq ft to 1,184 sq ft and from 1,291 sq ft to 1,614 sq ft for two middle income categories.

Amrit Abhijat, joint secretary in the ministry and the mission dorector of PMAY, said the progress was satisfacto­ry but admitted that there is room for growth.

“With awareness increasing and the infrastruc­ture in place, 2018-19 is the year we expect many more people from the middle income category to avail benefits under PMAY.”

The ministry is expecting the number of beneficiar­ies in the category to go up to 100,000 in the 2018-19. Overall, since PMAY was launched, out of the 3.2 million houses sanctioned till December 26, 2017, in urban areas, merely 9% have been built, according to ministry figures. Till December 2017, of the ₹22,757 crore sanctioned, the Centre has released ₹12,916 crore.

 ?? HT FILE ?? At the time of launch, the ministry had said that it intends to target 50,000 people from the middle income category in 201718.
HT FILE At the time of launch, the ministry had said that it intends to target 50,000 people from the middle income category in 201718.

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