(Potential) Impact of Social Housing on the South African housing market

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1 (Potential) Impact of Social Housing on the South African housing market AfD / NHFC Social Housing Workshop 1 June 2016 Kecia Rust (kecia@housingfinanceafrica.org) 083-785-4964 / 011 447 9581 www.housingfinanceafrica.org

2

3 Social housing is the term used to describe subsidized rental housing in South Africa. It differs from private rental in that it receives capital subsidies the Institutional Subsidy and the Restructuring Capital Grant from the state, and for this must meet certain principles. The Social Housing Act (No. 16 of 2008) defines social housing as a rental or co-operative housing option for low to medium income households at a level of scale and built form which requires institutionalised management and which is provided by social housing institutions or other delivery agents in approved projects in designated restructuring zones with the benefit of public funding. Target market: households earning R1500 R7500 per month (about 35% of South Africa s population) Two grants = up to R200k /unit: Restructuring Capital Grant: to support socio-economic integration Institutional Subsidy: to support institutional capacity Overseen by the Social Housing Regulatory Authority (SHRA) Social housing institutions must be accredited to operate.

South Africa s property market by deeds and house type 720 558 118 613 712 199 422 828 14 246 113 019 4 6.7 million properties in SA = R5,2 trillion 5.8 million residential properties = R4 trillion 1.43 million state subsidised properties = R219bn 14,45 million households in SA About 1,98m households (13%) look like they live in rental housing vs. 3.6m who say they rent and 2.68m who say they live rent free 1 249 556 213 075 146 478 213 353 1 140 529 9 385 708 House or brick/ concrete block structure on a separate stand or yard or on a farm Traditional dwelling/ hut/ structure made of traditional materials Semi-detached house Cluster house in complex Townhouse (semi-detached house in a complex) Informal dwelling (shack; not in backyard; e.g. in an informal/ squatter settlement or on a farm) Flat or apartment in a block of flats House/ flat/ room in backyard Informal dwelling (shack; in backyard) Room/ flatlet on a property or larger dwelling/ servants quarters/ granny flat Caravan/ tent Other

SA property market by tenure type 5 484 148 484 148 1 881 456 2 680 812 2 680 812 5 974 393 68640 121 784 4092937 3 607 069 3 416 645 1 703 740 1 703 740 Owned and fully paid off Owned but not yet paid off Rented Occupied rent-free Not applicable/ Other Conflating NDHS delivery data with Census tenure data, social housing comprises about 1% of all housing, or 1,9% of rental housing (defined by tenure) Owned and fully paid off Subsidised housing: RDP/BNG/ Discount benefit Scheme / Site & Service Owned but not yet paid off Rented Social housing Hostel / CRU Occupied rent-free Not applicable/ Other

Since 1994, we have seen incredible diversity in the rental market 6 New build Refurbishments Conversions Backyard & small scale landlordism Rooms Lower income rental is very often financed without subsidy: backyard, small scale, inner city In Johannesburg more housing is delivered as backyard rental than any other type: some of this is formal

Diversity in rental supply: backyard rental & small scale landlordism show demand 7 Diepsloot, 2004 Diepsloot 2010 Regularised settlements, one house one plot Backyard rental, extensions, shops

Economic impact 8 The total, direct economic impact from SA s housing construction and residential rental sector is about R152 billion / annum industry : this includes intermediate inputs and GVA Value added by housing construction and rental activities: over R81-bn in 2014, which represents 2.4% of South Africa's GVA of R3,4 trillion. This makes housing on par with Agriculture/Forestry/Fishing, and slightly smaller than Electricity/Gas/Steam sector. Residential house construction and rental sectors sustain employment of 468 000 people annually. Of this, rental sustained 226 000 employees in 2014. SA s residential rental value chain generated R97-bn of sales in South Africa's economy in 2014, including construction, services and labour and generating R11,5bn in net indirect taxes. Also, rental of subsidised houses and secondary accommodation on subsidised stands creates a regular income stream for low income beneficiaries, and enables many households to access more appropriate accommodation elsewhere in the housing sector. Data is from CAHF Research: Work in Progress 2016

2010 Cost Benefit Analysis 9 Social rental housing has higher direct overall financial costs: 2-2.5 times higher than RDP (up to R400-R500k per unit over 20 years) RDP offers better redistributive potential benefits of ownership and targets the most poor Higher costs in social rental due to better location, building quality, maintenance This buys better socioeconomic benefits: transport, education, health Over time, however, social housing costs government less: residents pay operating costs Source: Rhizome Management Services / Rebel Group Advisory http://www.shra.org.za/images/stories/2011/pdfs/cba%20_durban_%202010.pdf

10 Can social housing fill our gaps? Affordability Segregation Inaccessibility

Our gap market: affordability 11 GAP >R56 000 R160 000+ R350 000 R450 000 R450 000+ Subsidy market: <R3500 Gap market(s): <R3 500 R15 000 Gap / affordable market R15 000 R20 000 Normal market? R20 000 + Repayment affordability: <R875/month Repayment affordability: about R875 R3750 Repayment affordability: about R3750 R5000 Repayment affordability: about R5000+ Individual subsidy up to about R160 0000 FLISP subsidy: about R87 000 R20 000 FLISP subsidy: none

Our gap market: affordability 12 >R56 000 R160 000+ R380 000 R500 000 R500 000+ Subsidy market: <R3500 Gap market(s): <R3 500 R15 000 Gap / affordable market R15 000 R20 000 Normal market? R20 000 + Repayment affordability: <R875/month Repayment affordability: about R875 R3750 Repayment affordability: about R3750 R5000 Repayment affordability: about R5000+ Individual subsidy up to about R160 0000 FLISP subsidy: about R87 000 R20 000 FLISP subsidy: none Rental (social?) housing can fill the gap: targeted at households earning R2500 R20 000/month, creating access to affordable accommodation

Our gap market: segregation 13 Cape Town s property market is clearly split between high value (red and orange) properties, and entry level (green and blue properties). The city s challenge will be to integrate these spaces to enhance socio-economic diversity.

Our gap market: inaccessibility 14 Hlogi Maredi is a teaching assistant at St Stithians College in Randburg, Johannesburg. Her mother has been on the waiting list for a subsidised house since Hlogi was a child. Hlgogi wants to buy a house for R300 000 for herself and her mother. Where she works 52km = at least 1.5 hours on public transport and costs R568/month Where she can find something to buy

Rental market opportunities are clear: how can social housing facilitate this investment and broaden its impact? South Africa has had an under-supply of rental housing new construction and a growing supply is critical for a functioning housing market Various funds already targeting rental: HIFSA, I H S, Futuregrowth, TUHF, others can SHRA link Innovative landlords / developers: Afhco, City Properties, Calgro, others. Growing experience with institutional management requirements Target market: Young families, newly urbanised, employed formal or informal Key public sector workers and labourers Gap market (households earning R1500 R9500 and above) in some cases with credit indebtedness that precludes ownership Investment opportunities are include: Growth nodes within cities for example Soweto, Alexandra etc. Inner city areas where there is a track record (Johannesburg, Pretoria) Urban regeneration areas (Ekurhuleni, Cape Town Pilot Project, Nelson Mandela Bay, others) The new infrastructure corridors (SONA) North West, Northern Cape (Sishen to Saldanha) Social housing subsidy: is this the best use of state funding? Does it enhance affordability? Does it stimulate investment interest? Social housing finance interventions: do they address the financial needs of SHIs? Of landlords targeting low income? How else might investment be further catalysed? 15

Potential impact of social housing: can social housing subsidies / finance / other interventions respond more effectively to the demand for rental as expressed by household tenure status, improving housing conditions for those living sub-optimally and stimulating private sector investment? 16

17 Thank you! Kecia Rust kecia@housingfinanceafrica.org www.housingfinanceafrica.org +2783 785 4964 Facebook: Centre for Affordable Housing Finance in Africa Twitter @CAHF_Africa Twitter @AUHF_Housing