FORMALIZATION OF INFORMAL REAL ESTATE. Prof Chryssy Potsiou FIG President, UNECE WPLA bureau member

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FORMALIZATION OF INFORMAL REAL ESTATE Prof Chryssy Potsiou FIG President, UNECE WPLA bureau member chryssy.potsiou@gmail.com Procedures for the legalization and registration of buildings and building units-challenges and Problems, K&CLGE, Pristina, 2018

Housing is important Living in a home that is decent & affordable provides for healthy conditions; people are able to perform better at jobs and in school. We do wish people to be able to live in homes that are decent & affordable. The question is how much can governments afford to provide? No country has enough public funds countries need foreign investment & the involvement of private sector Photo by C. Potsiou

Title registration is important Registration improves security of tenure, establishes property rights over the investment, minimizes lending risks and provides easy access to credit and funding mechanisms; enables the poor to unlock the value of their land; brings economic freedom it also improves legal protection, as well as legal empowerment of occupants/owners. Karl Marx saw private property as the source of wealth and called for its elimination to promote equality. A century and a half later, we know that a country without a formal system for registering private property rights limits its own economic development and prevents its citizens from realizing their full potential.

Informal solutions : dead capital The transition economic process includes: Privatization & Property registration Changes in the role of the state from being a provider of growth to becoming an enabler of growth, with the private sector being the engine of the economy Informal development creates dead capital; it affects negatively the economy as well as the environment and has a major social impact. Source: The World Bank

Content of the FIG/UNECE publication Background: 13 years of research in the region 1. Definition / size of the problem in the various UNECE countries 2. reasons /causes 3. various types of informal development in the various countries (with many similarities) Albania, Cyprus, Greece, FYR of Macedonia Montenegro, Pristina, But also from Georgia, Italy, Kyrgyzstan 4. Assessment of the adopted policies

Identified causes Major political changes coupled with rapid urbanization, and often uncontrolled, massive internal migration, conflicts, marginalization, natural disasters, cumbersome authorization processes for home improvements and modernization, and corruption may be listed as some of the causes. absence of policies by the states and their failure to adopt pro-growth planning as well as affordable housing policies, weaknesses of the private sector, the lack of political will to develop land policies which would facilitate the recognition of existing tenure and private property rights and will aid the transition from centrally planned to market economies; and the failure or reluctance of state agencies to implement measures to support economic reforms.

The obvious when neither the state nor the private sector provide the supply of appropriate real estate types and quantities to satisfy the current demand, people build informally. People should not be punished as a result.

Informality in the real estate sector is directly related to a general informal sector Informality is a prominent characteristic of development in the so-called frontier markets ; it affects public revenues, productivity and job opportunity ; non-productive, dead capital ; competition is distorted Informality in the real estate sector is considered to be a social, an economic and an environmental challenge Since 2005 we have systematically encouraged countries to initiate - where possible - formalization projects We have assessed the policies adopted from the various governments (formalization or demolition)

a long-lasting, bureaucratic and expensive formalization process? we have also managed to identify and quantify the annual GDP loss caused by delaying the formalization of the informal real estate sector, and have proved that it can be significant and worthy of serious consideration. The formalization of informal development is the first important step towards formalization in the real property market. If there is little or no possibility of selling a house, home ownership can offer little in the way of capital accumulation. It is hard to make money from a house that cannot be sold, or nobody is interested to buy.

Example: Greece Estimated annual loss in GDP due to informality in the real estate market, over a period of 25 years: years 1-5: $1 billion/year years 6-10: $1.5 billion/year years 11-25: $2.3 billion/year A best case scenario based on assumption of continued weak economy with a 10-year phased recovery and relatively efficient formalization process. As the general economy improves over the prediction period the impact of formalization on the economy increases as well.

Why do we need some TG for a F-F-P Formalization? Rationale for guidelines Why do we need guidelines? a Fit for Purpose solution is needed to meet the SDGs timely, reliably, inclusively & affordably Policies adopted from the various governments to address the problem: often lack of a concrete Fir for Purpose Strategy and in many countries formalization is a long lasting, bureaucratic and expensive procedure may start with the best of intentions but become bogged down due to administrative bottlenecks or change of government e.g., require all improvements, conformity to regulations, plus penalties to be undertaken by the occupants prior to any formalization; or provide planning amnesty, but require high penalties while ownership titles where missing are politically more difficult to provide the momentum is missed reflect that governments often understand the problem but they do not fully realize the size of its impacts Economic impacts Direct: loss of taxation revenue & fees (informal real estate cannot be transferred, rented or mortgaged) Indirect: no investment on informal real estate, loss of job positions & taxation revenue through undeclared income of labor in informal sector Social impacts insecure tenure, risk for evictions or demolition no access to credit, risky investment, permanent threat lack of services, poor quality of construction/risk for health or life Environmental impacts flooding, pollution of waters, soil and air due to illegal wells and sewage systems; high energy consumption due to commuting and poor construction quality

A General Guide Who to use the guidelines? The Private sector politicians Central Government, Parliament members Local Authorities, Municipalities, State Agencies Professionals involved in the real estate sector lawyers, planners, economists, notaries, surveyors, civil engineers, constructors, real estate agents, appraisals, etc The State The Society Education/Academia Schools Universities NGOs Should explain why a country would choose: to go beyond the established scientific/engineering/planning practice, in order to successfully deal with: the Property Market Challenges, Funding Challenges, Structural Stability Challenges, Environmental Challenges and difficult Ethical Challenges Hostile reactions to a formalization project Banks & Funding mechanisms

List of issues to be taken into consideration raising awareness about the economic and social benefits of formalization and other socio- economic realities legal and regulatory issues procedures technical advice on how to: engage all parties provide incentives implement, register, improve, or demolish monitor the protected assets avoid corruption improve relevant policies for sustainable real estate markets

The Sustainable Development Agenda 2030 was signed by 193 UN state members in 2015 Surveyors contribution to the Sustainable Development Agenda 2030: 17 goals(sdgs), 169 targets and 230 indicators.

The Sustainable Development Agenda 2030 Goal 1 and target 1.4. SDG1. End poverty in all its forms everywhere. 1.4. by 2030, countries should ensure that all men and women, in particular the poor and the vulnerable, have equal rights to economic resources, as well as access to basic services, ownership and control over land and other forms of property, inheritance, natural resources, appropriate new technology and financial services, including microfinance.