The Success and failure Public Housing Policies in Nigeria
The table below shows
the summary of the success and failure
of housing policies in Nigeria.
PERIOD
PROGRAMME
|
TARGET
|
ACHIEVEMENT
LEVEL
|
First National
Development
Plan(1962-1968)
|
v Planned
construction of 61,000 housing units.
|
v
Only 500 units less than 1% of the
planned units were constructed. The political chaos and the resulting civil
war (1966-1970) contributed to the marginal progress recorded during this
period.
|
Second National
Development
Plan(1971-74)
|
v Establishment
of National Council of Housing (1972) to advise the government on housing
matters and Federal Housing Authority (FHA) in 1973 to co-ordinate public
housing provisions
v Plan
direct construction of 59,000 ‘low-cost’ housing units across the Federation.
|
v 7,080
housing units representing 12% of planned houses were actually built.
|
Third National
Development
Plan (1975-
1980)
|
v -Creation
of Federal Ministry of Housing, Urban Development and Environment and
conversion of Nigerian Building Society to Federal Mortgage bank of Nigeria
(FMBN).
v Promulgation
of the Land Use Decree (1978)
v Planned
construction of 202,000 low-cost housing units nationwide.
|
v 30,000
housing units representing less than 15% of planned houses were actually
completed
|
4th National
Development
Plan (1981-
1985)
|
v National
Housing Program launched for the first time in 1980. Earmarked N1.9 billion
for the construction of 160,000 housing units, for low-income people
v The
second phase of the housing program set out to construct 20,000 housing units
across the country
|
v A
total of 47,234 housing units representing about 23.6% of planned housing
units were constructed in the first phase. The second phase was cut short by
the military coup of 1983
|
Military
Governments
(1986-1999)
|
v National
Housing program planned 121,000 houses on Site and-Services housing program
between 1993 and 1995
v
1988 National Housing Policy
launched to provide Nigerians access to quality housing and basic
infrastructure.
v
1991 National Housing Policy was
launched with the goal of granting all Nigerians access to decent
housing by 2000 in response to the slogan “ Housing for All by the
year 2000” of the United Nations.
|
v
5,500 housing units (less than 5%)
of planned houses were actually constructed.
v
Provision of rural infrastructure
through the Directorate of Food, Roads and Rural Infrastructure (DFFRI)
|
Civilian
Governments
(1999-2010)
|
v
The New National Housing and Urban
Development Policy (NHUDP) launched in 2002 with the goal of ensuring that “all
Nigerians own or have access to decent housing through private sector-led
initiatives”.
v
Planned construct about 10,271
housing units through the Public-Private Partnership (PPP) arrangements in
different PPP housing schemes across the country.
v
Planned construction of 500 housing
units in the Presidential Mandate Housing Scheme in all 36 State capitals and
Abuja.
v
Government planned a pilot project
involving the construction of 40,000 housing units per annum nationwide.
|
v 2000
serviced plot through PPP site and service in Ikorodu, Lagos.
v 4,440
housing units completed in Abuja, Port Harcourt, Akure and Abeokuta, through PPP.
v The
Presidential Mandate Housing Scheme did not take off in many States. In Ogun State
about 100 housing units representing 20% of the planned units were constructed.
v Records
of the achievement level of the pilot projects are not available.
|
Source: Ali (1996); Omole (2001),
Apart from the failure of public-sector housing
to provide planned number of housing units as Table 1 suggests, unimpressive
result has also been recorded in the provision of quality housing in Nigeria.
Although each of the 1988, 1991, 2002 and 2006
National Housing Policies set outs to provide Nigerians access to qualitative
and satisfactory housing at affordable cost; several studies have succinctly
shown that these policies and the housing schemes derived from them achieved
minimal success in this area (Awotona, 1978;)
Each of the above cited works identified lack of
consideration of end users’ socio-economic and cultural attributes and personal
preferences as being responsible for unsatisfactory public housing as perceived
by the users. Moreover, there is the general notion that this development is
due to lack of proper monitoring and evaluation of housing policies and
programs in Nigeria
(Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1991).
Evidence in existing literature suggests that one
of the key criteria for enhancing product and service quality is a good
information infrastructure that allows for feedback loops, performance
appraisals and benchmarking against self and others (Kellecher, 2010). The
reality is that there is dearth of good information infrastructure that allows
for feedback mechanism in public housing delivery system in Nigeria
(Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1991). This is probably why there appear to be no
adequate and reliable information base for effective housing policy
formulation, program design and implementation strategies in the country, which
is inimical to effective and efficient public housing delivery system. It is
very obvious from the review of literature that the very reason why this
problem exists in the country has not been properly investigated.
With respect to affordable housing provision, the
UN-HABITAT (2006) report on Nigeria
noted that past public housing policies and programs in the country were aimed
at enabling low-income earners gain access to decent housing at affordable
cost. According to Aribigbola (2008), the 2002 New National Housing and Urban
Development Policy (NNHUDP) for instance, asserted that no Nigerian is expected
to pay more than 20% of his or her monthly income on housing. But to the
contrary, prior studies (Onibokun, 1985; Awotona, 1990; Mba 1992; Olotuah and
Bobadoye, 2009; Ibem, 2010) have shown that the targeted population of many
past public housing schemes in Nigeria
did not benefit from such schemes. This was due to high cost of housing units
provided. Consequently, several authors have contended that the constraints in
accessing housing inputs (land, building materials and finance) as well as cost
of providing infrastructure were partly responsible for the hike in the cost of
public housing beyond the reach of an average Nigerian (Ikejiofor, 1999;
UN-HABITAT, 2006; Aribigbola, 2008). In addition, it can also be deduced from
literature that poor management of those housing schemes and the use of
inappropriate design standards contributed to high cost of public housing in
the last few decades in Nigeria
(Onibokun, 1985; Mustapha, 2002; Ademiluyi, 2010).
From the foregoing, it is evident that there are
challenges in the provision of affordable housing that is quantitative and
qualitative adequate by public sector in Nigeria since independence in 1960.
Some of these challenges are contextual and are primarily due to the external
social, economic and political environment in which public housing schemes were
conceived, designed and implemented while others are organizational challenges
within public housing agencies. The current study is primarily concerned with
the causes of, and possible solutions to these challenges.
REFERENCES
Ademiluyi, I.A (2010) Public Housing Delivery
Strategies in Nigeria:
A Historical Perspective of Policies and Programmes. Journal of Sustainable
Development in Africa.12 (6) 153-161
Ajanlekoko, K.S. (2002). Appraisal of the
National Housing Policy. Housing Today 1 (6)13-20
Akinmoladun, O.I., Oluwoye, J., (2007). An
Assessment of Why the Problems of Housing Shortages Persist in Developing
Countries: A case of Study of Lagos Metropolis, Nigeria Pakistan Journal of
Social Science 4(4) 589-598).
Awotona, A. (1990) .Nigerian Government
Participation in Housing: 1970- 1980. Habitat
International 14 (10) 17-40
Balchin, P.R; Isaac D. and Chen, J. (2000) Urban
Economics: A Global Perspective. New York: Palgrave
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