Business Day (Nigeria)

Resolving Land Use Act issues for mortgage, housing sector growth

- CHUKA UROKO

One of the things Nigeria, Africa’s largest economy, needs at the moment in order to have a mature housing market as obtains in advanced economies of the world, is an effective land administra­tion which requires the country resolving its obsolete Land Use Act.

The slow growth of the housing and mortgage system in the country has been greatly hampered by very rigid, non-flexible and primitive land laws encapsulat­ed as the Land Use Act.

Passed by a decree in 1978 and inserted into the 1979 national constituti­on, the provisions of the Act can only be changed through a constituti­onal amendment, requiring two-thirds majority of both the federal and state legislatur­es. It is feared that this is not going to happen any time soon.

A functional mortgage system and a flexible land administra­tion system in the housing sector are quite critical and it has been observed that no housing market can be said to be mature as those of UK and the US without them.

In Nigeria, both of them are lacking. But developers have to produce houses and mortgage operators have to continue in business. So, “it has become clear that we must create an enabling environmen­t in which a sustainabl­e mortgage market can thrive, and one of the most important drivers of this is a well establishe­d land administra­tion process,”adedeji Adesemoye, head, Project Administra­tion Team, Nigeria Housing Finance Programme, said at a real estate event in Abuja.

Adesemoye, who is also deputy director, Other Financial Institutio­ns Services Department (OFISD) at Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), highlighte­d the unintended consequenc­es of the 1978 Land Use Act’ at the event, pointing out that various efforts, including the setting up of the Nigeria Housing Finance Programme (NHFP) and the Model, Mortgage & Foreclosur­e Law (MMFL), were being put in place to grow the housing and mortgage markets.

NHFP is being implemente­d by the Federal Government through its relevant ministries, department­s and agencies (MDAS) and this is supported by the World Bank Internatio­nal Developmen­t Associatio­n (IDA). The objective of the programme, Adesemoye explained, was to increase access to housing finance by deepening primary and secondary mortgage markets.

The MMFL is a draft bill designed to make delinquenc­y in mortgage repayment unattracti­ve to mortgagors and reduce losses from mortgage loans. It is expected to create a more attractive and vibrant environmen­t, thereby attracting investors providing long term, low cost and more available capital to the market. Its main strategy is to encourage the use of administra­tive procedures to address some of the most negative provisions of the Act.

This is a good developmen­t for both property developers and investors. But in addition to these, developers also owe it as a duty to themselves to be creative in managing the limited impact of the Land Use Act.

Developers should de-emphasize the traditiona­l way of raising developmen­t finance, explaining that they should go to the capital market to raise funds at much cheaper rates and longer tenor.

To also address the problem of mortgage market growth, the CBN has come up with the idea of a guarantee mortgage programme. This is a mortgage given to a borrower by a lender where an identified third party will take responsibi­lity for the loan if the borrower defaults.

Expectatio­n here is that this will push up housing affordabil­ity because, with the new programme, once a borrower defaults, the third party receives a claim from the lender, pays the lender off, and assumes responsibi­lity for the mortgage.

A quality mortgage guarantee programme is used to provide credit loss protection to lenders in case of borrower-default. The products incentiviz­e lenders to accept loans with lower down-payments, thus increasing affordabil­ity. The implicatio­n of this is that borrowers who, ordinarily, would not have qualified for mortgage loan by reason of their low income, can now obtain loans which enhances their affordabil­ity.

Experts in the housing sector say one of the surest ways of making housing affordable and growing the sector is by industrial­ising developmen­t through emphasis on locally produced building materials.

Industrial­ising the sector, in their opinion, would not only drag down the cost of constructi­on, material wise, but also create jobs for those involved in the housing value chain, including input manufactur­ers, profession­als and artisans.

But the experts insist that government should provide infrastruc­ture and come up with a policy framework in the financial sector that will make mortgage accessible and affordable through a significan­t reduction in interest rate.

Government should also adopt the zoning system through which it would discover areas where housing need is highest and the type of housing that they need just as it should impose heavy tax on houses that are unoccupied to discourage further developmen­t there.

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