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India should pay heed to de Soto, it should not ignore the Singaporean model
either
The government’s plan to make India “slum free” is taking shape. Peruvian economist Hernando de Soto is being roped in to provide inputs. An ambitious scheme called the Rajiv Awas Yojana is being designed. This is a very important area because it goes to the crux of how to accommodate 300-400 million people in urban India in the next three decades. The urbanization process will redefine the country within a generation and we need to get it right. In previous columns, I have argued that we need to think of slums as “routers” in the migration process and that the property rights of the urban poor are not just about real estate ownership (“Slums defy concrete solutions”, BS, December 9 2010, and “Property rights for future migrants”, BS, March 10, 2010). In this article, I will look at the critical role that public housing can play in guiding the urbanization process.
Public
housing is not a new idea and various versions of it have been tried across the
world. However, it must be remembered that it has very rarely been a wholesale
success. In many cases, it has created ghettos of poverty and despondency. In
others, the relatively rich have “captured” the projects and have benefited
from the subsidies. One of the few exceptions is Singapore where public housing
projects played a very important role in transforming the city-state within a
generation from a poor, slum-riddled port to one of the world’s most prosperous
and advanced cities. What makes it even more impressive is that this was
achieved by the mobilization of internal resources and not the deployment of a
windfall from oil or some such natural resource
The Singapore story
In the early 1960s, Singapore suffered from severe housing shortages. A large section of the population lived in unhygienic squatter camps that were prone to frequent fires and communal tensions. In a single fire at Bukit Ho Swee in 1961, several people were killed and 16,000 people were made homeless. The race
riots of July1964 left 23 people dead and hundreds injured. In other words,
life in Singapore’s slums was no better than that in slums that we see in
Indian cities today.
The British-run colonial government
decided to set up the Housing and Development Board (HDB) in 1960. The agency
had built over 54,000 housing units by the time Singapore became independent in
1965. In the initial phase, the flats were basic and were meant for renting.
Over time, the quality and choice of housing were increased even as schemes were
introduced to help people buy their homes. An important financing innovation in
1968 was to allow citizens to use money from the Central Provident Fund for
down payments and servicing.
HDB housing grew very rapidly in the 1970s
and 1980s. In tandem with this growth, the government invested heavily in
common amenities such as health, education and public transport. Special
efforts were made to accommodate small businesses as well as community hubs,
such as sports facilities and places of worship. Today, about 80 per cent of
Singaporeans live in HDB housing and 95 per cent own their homes. It is
extraordinary that the citizens of one of the world’s most prosperous cities
choose to live in public housing.
What can we learn?
I have found that Indian “urban experts” arrogantly dismiss Singapore as a
small-scale experiment. I disagree. Singapore is a small country but it is a
reasonably large city of 5 million — larger than all but six Indian cities. It
has been able to dramatically raise the standards of living of its population
in a very dense urban environment purely through internally generated
resources. This is why, for the last two decades, a string of Chinese mayors
have swallowed their pride and made a pilgrimage to the city-state. I know that
Singapore’s public housing policies cannot be blindly applied to India, but
there are some important principles that are universal and worthy of
consideration:
The purpose of this article is to point
out that there is an “Asian model” for thinking about public housing and slum
upgrade. This does not mean that rockstar economists like de Soto should be
ignored. He clearly has ideas that should be considered seriously. I merely
hope that the Indian government will weigh various options before embarking on
an important and expensive project.
Courtesy by : BS Dtd: July 14, 2010
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