Bangkok Post

HOMES CAN SHELTER INDIA’S CHINA DREAM

- Andy Mukherjee is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist. Andy Mukherjee

India quite literally needs to put a roof over its China dream. It took a pandemic and a lockdown to highlight the precarious existence of India’s blue-collar workers. Left without jobs and shelter, an estimated 30 million — roughly a fifth of the urban labour force — have gone back to their villages, with many completing long, hazardous journeys on foot when trains and buses shut down.

No wonder, then, that Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government cleared a plan this week to build inexpensiv­e rental dwellings in cities for 350,000 workers.

Giving rural migrants an incentive to return is crucial to restoring economic activity to pre-Covid levels. But there’s an opportunit­y here to do much more. For India to industrial­ise, rethinking the housing situation will be as important as freeing the urban poor from large medical bills and helping them build retirement savings. If the country of 1.3 billion people wants to be a factory to the world — the next China — it must start by giving workers low-cost living quarters.

India is sitting on an inventory of more than 1.3 million unsold homes. Mumbai-based property researcher Liases Foras estimates that roughly half of these units could face delays and other execution risk; prices on nearly nine out of 10 apartments may have to be cut by 5% to 15% to hook wary buyers. That’s billions of dollars in lost revenue.

It may not be possible to repurpose this stock as worker accommodat­ion. Neverthele­ss, as losses on pricey condominiu­ms crystallis­e for struggling developers and stretched financiers, they can be made more bearable by tax breaks, cheap government land and other fiscal support for affordable rental housing — a new revenue stream. Assured of a decent rental yield, investors will be encouraged to finance this new asset class. Institutio­nal capital will return to depressed real estate. Constructi­on will absorb surplus manpower and create badly needed wage income.

Cheap urban rents will bring India the full benefit of labour mobility, which isn’t constraine­d by Chinese-style hukou, or city registrati­on requiremen­ts. Yet the rapid urbanisati­on that turned East Asia into an exporting powerhouse and created a foundation for mass consumptio­n has eluded the country.

Young men migrate to cities for economic reasons, and return to their villages in old age. Apart from cultural factors, availabili­ty and cost of housing is the main reason why women and children stay behind, making urbanisati­on in India both slow and rather “masculine”, as economist Chinmay Tumbe, who has studied migration trends since the 1870s, has put it.

Creaky infrastruc­ture, infuriatin­g red tape, occasional­ly overvalued currency and lack of meaningful free-trade arrangemen­ts have held back the share of manufactur­ing in the economy to 16% — a modest rise from 5% in 1901.

The economy is geared to satisfy the top 150 million earners, as Rathin Roy, until recently the director at the New Delhi-based National Institute of Public Finance and Policy, has argued. This depresses the wages that would be generated by becoming good at making what the next 300 million want.

In the absence of broad-based income growth, consumers boosted spending by borrowing. When they eventually started to deleverage last year, India faced an acute demand funk, even for 7-cent munchies.

Since then, Covid-19 hasn’t been the only wake-up call. Rapidly deteriorat­ing US-China relations portend sweeping changes in global supply chains, but even in its own neighbourh­ood, India isn’t competitiv­e in manufactur­ing. A once-in-a-generation opportunit­y could slip out of its grasp.

At a furniture store in Ho Chi Minh City some years ago, I saw colourful satin-upholstere­d sofas whose sides were drab black polyester. This, I was told, was because the sides would take dirt from motorbike tires and must be easy to clean: A Vietnamese family would park the two-wheeler, its most precious possession, next to the living-room furniture to keep it safe at night. Societies that value and make things that workers themselves use lift living standards and labour productivi­ty.

No wonder Vietnam, now a hub for Samsung Electronic­s Co, is winning investment­s from Inventec Corp, Apple Inc’s main assembly partner for AirPods, as well as Hon Hai Precision Industry Co, better known as Foxconn.

India must also make more shoes, clothes and toys. To create a permanent urban workforce that will both produce and consume those wage goods, it should also build millions of new homes.

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