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Millions of empty homes, but migrants to Indian cities cannot rent them

by Rina Chandran | @rinachandran | Thomson Reuters Foundation
Friday, 2 February 2018 10:50 GMT

A high-rise residential tower is pictured behind old residential buildings in Mumbai, India July 24, 2017. REUTERS/Danish Siddiqui

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The share of rental housing in cities has fallen by nearly half over the past five decades

By Rina Chandran

MUMBAI, Feb 2 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - Tens of thousands of people migrating to Indian cities each day cannot find adequate housing, as rental markets shrink despite millions of homes remaining vacant, government data shows.

The share of rental housing in cities has fallen by nearly half over the past five decades, according to the government's annual economic survey released this week.

Rent control, unclear property rights, and a focus on building homes for ownership rather than renting are at the root of the problem, it said.

"Policies related to housing need to recognise that India has an increasingly fluid population (and) that across the income spectrum, rental housing is an important foothold into a city for new arrivals," the survey said.

A quarter of India's urban population lives in informal housing, including slums, due to the critical shortage of affordable accommodation, according to the social consultancy firm FSG in Mumbai.

That number is likely to increase with migration from the countryside to cities, as people seek better job prospects.

A government plan to provide housing for all by 2022 is meant to create 20 million new urban housing units and 30 million rural homes.

But most states are behind target, and analysts say the programme will not solve homelessness.

Finalising the national urban rental housing policy may help resolve the issue, as the current draft offers more protection from hostile tenants and gives them more incentive to rent, said Anuj Puri, chairman of ANAROCK Property Consultants.

"The lack of a clear regulatory framework has resulted in many house owners preferring to keep their houses vacant rather than renting them out," Puri told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

The share of rental housing in Indian cities declined to 28 percent in 2011 from 54 percent in 1961, according to the economic survey.

At the same time, the number of vacant homes in cities rose to 11.1 million in 2011 from 6.5 million a decade earlier. Vacant houses make up more than 12 percent of total urban housing stock.

The financial hub of Mumbai, where more than half the population lives in slums and informal settlements, has nearly half a million vacant homes, survey data showed.

"The fact that such a large number of houses continue to be vacant is not just ironical, but reflects a serious policy failure," said Shivani Chaudhry, executive director of the New Delhi-based advocacy group Housing and Land Rights Network.

The government must prioritise "social rental housing, tax vacant properties, and control real estate speculation," she said.

(Reporting by Rina Chandran @rinachandran. Editing by Jared Ferrie. Please credit the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, that covers humanitarian news, women's rights, trafficking, property rights, climate change and resilience. Visit news.trust.org to see more stories.)

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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