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4
Efforts will be made to develop and promote use of cost-effective
standardised housing designs for each geo-climatic region.
4 The
Central and state governements will take initiatives in simplifying
the existing legal provisions and procedures relating to the acquisition
of land, to enable taking over the possession of land speedily.
4
Investment in rental housing, especially for the lower middle
income groups will be stimulated by suitable amendments to rent
control laws by state governments on the basis of the model Rent
Control Law.
4 Increasing
proportion of the resources of insurance sector, Unit Trust, Commercial
Banks and Cooperative banks will be channelled into housing with
lending rates reflecting the average yields of these resources.
Introduction
Shelter and Development
are mutually supportive. Housing forms an important part of the
strategy of the Government for the alleviation of poverty and
employment generation, and is to be viewed as an integral part
of overall improvement of human settlements and economic development.
The Global Shelter Strategy adopted by the United Nations in November
1988 calls upon different governments to take steps for the formulation
of a National Housing Policy to achieve the goals of the strategy.
The Government has tabled in both Houses of Parliament in May
1988, the Draft National Housing Policy and it had been approved
by the Rajya Sabha. In the light of the developments in
the national and international scene after the presentation of
the Draft and in the context of the formulation of the Eighth
Plan, it has become imperative to elaborate and restate the National
Housing Policy.
Despite considerable
investment and efforts over successive Plan periods, the housing
problem continues to be daunting in terms of
- the large number of homeless households,
- rapid growth of slums and unauthorised
colonies,
- spiraling prices and rents of
land and houses,
- rampant speculation,
- deficient availability of water,
sanitation and basic services to bulk of the population and
- the increasing struggle of the
poor and vulnerable sections to secure affordable and adequate
shelter.
The housing shortage
is estimated by the National Buildings Organisation in 1991 to
be about 31 million units, composed of 20.6 million in rural areas,
and 10.4 million in urban areas, with the bulk of the backlog
consisting of kutcha unserviceable units. The rapid growth
of urban population and its concentration in 300 cities with a
population exceeding one lakh has led to:
- increasing congestion and overcrowding
in small houses,
- steady growth of slums and informal
settlements
- severe pressure on civic services,
in the context of the inadequate supply of affordable housing
by public and private sector
- acute shortage of funds for the
development of settlements and
- extension of city level infrastructure.
This has been aggravated
by institutional deficiencies of housing agencies and local bodies,
and insufficient attention to the housing needs of the poor.
Over the Eighth Plan
period, it has been projected that over and above the present
backlog, the shelter requirement by way of upgradation and new
construction would be 122.2 lakh units in rural areas and 955
lakh units in the urban areas. At the same time, bulk of the housing
in the country is constructed by the people themselves with their
own resources, and a major proportion of all housing in rural
areas is based on bio-mass. The crucial role of government at
different levels is not to seek to build houses itself but to
make appropriate investment and create conditions where all women
and men, especially the poor may gain and secure adequate housing,
and to remove impediments to housing activity.
The objectives, goals
and strategy for housing policy need to be considered in this
context.
Objectives
The basic objectives
of the policy are:
- To assist all people, and in particular
the houseless, the inadequately housed and the vulnerable sections,
to secure for them- selves affordable shelter through access
to developed land building materials, finance and technology.
- To create an enabling environment
for housing activity for various sections by eliminating constraints
and by developing an efficient and equitable system for the
delivery of housing inputs.
- To expand the provision of infrastructure
facilities in rural and urban areas in order to improve the
environment of human settlements, increase the access of poorer
households to basic services and to increase the supply of developed
land for housing.
- To undertake, within the overall
context of policies for poverty alleviation and employment,
steps for improving the housing situation of the poorest sections
and vulnerable groups by direct initiative and financial support
of the State.
- To help mobilise the resources
and facilitate the expansion of investment in housing in order
to meet the needs of housing construction and upgradation and
augmentation of infrastructure.
- To promote a more equal distribution
of land and houses in urban and rural areas, and to curb
speculation in land and housing in consonance with macro-economic
policies for efficient and equitable growth.
- To promote vernacular architecture
and to preserve the nations rich heritage in the field of human
settlements.
Goals
The main goals to
be achieved in the next ten years would be
- to reduce houselessness;
- provide larger supply of developed
land and finance to different income groups;
- promote use of appropriate and
energy saving building materials and cost effective construction
technologies;
- assist in the upgradation of all
unserviceable houses in rural and urban areas, with a view to
particularly improving the housing conditions of the rural homeless
and the inadequately housed slum dwellers, scheduled castes
and scheduled tribes, and other vulnerable sections;
- provide the minimum level of basic
services and amenities to ensure a healthy environment within
the framework of integrated development of rural and urban settlements.
Elements of Housing
Policy
Housing Norms
Housing norms would
be evolved at local levels with due regard to different geo-climatic
conditions and life styles of the people. Efforts will be made
to develop and promote use of cost-effective standardised housing
designs for each geo-climatic region. In rural areas, except those
on the periphery of large cities, the size of the plot would not
ordinarily be less than 85 square metres, with a provision for
built up accommodation of not less than 20 square metres, and
with adequate provision of services. In urban areas, the size
of the plot should ordinarily be less than 25 square metres with
a provision permissible built-up accommodation and services on
individual or share basis in a neighbourhood adequately served
with community facilities. In devising building standards, the
special needs of the handicapped would be taken into account by
the local bodies.
Rural Housing
It is recognised
that rural housing is qualitatively different from urban housing
in that the housing activity in rural areas is not so much based
on cash economy and depends much more on land rights and access
to resources. The strategy for rural housing will be based on:
- support to varying needs of shelter
including new construction, additions and upgradation; providing
assistance by way of dissemination of appropriate technology
and delivery system for promoting self-help housing;
- assuring land and tenure rights
by enactment of enabling laws for conferment of homestead rights;
- prevention of alienation of homesteads
on tribal land;
- avoiding unnecessary displacement
or dehousing of rural settlements due to development projects;
- where unavoidable ensuring proper
rehabilitation of the households, with full community involvement,
according to the national norms in this regard;
- rehabilitation of households affected
by natural calamities in terms of assistance for reconstruction
and access to services, within the national scheme of calamity
relief;
- preserving the customary and traditional
rights of access to housing resources based on forest materials
and common village resources;
- promoting the maximum use of indigenous
building materials and construction techniques with due regard
to geo-climatic variations in different regions;
- the coordinated provision of water
supply, sanitation, roads, and other basic infrastructure services
to existing and new habitations besides employment opportunities
which will also help to reduce the migration in urban areas;
- the establishment of a suitable
institutional structure including strengthening of existing
organisations at the state, district and local levels, with
responsibility for the implementation, supervision and monitoring
of rural housing schemes, and with the full involvement of beneficiaries,
voluntary agencies and village panchayats;
- giving special attention to the
needs of the poorest segments of scheduled castes, scheduled
tribes and other disadvantaged persons.
The development of
house sites and the upgradation of rural housing will be linked
activities under the mtesated Rural Development Programme, Jawahar
Rozgar Yojana, and other programmes for the creation of rural
assets and employment.
Slums and
Squatter Settlements in Urban Areas
and Housing for Urban Poor
Keeping in view the
policies of planned growth of urbanisation, income support and
poverty alleviation, and together with steps to arrest the growth
of slums in urban areas, the Central and State Governments would
take steps to:
- avoid forcible relocation or dehousing
of slum dwellers;
- encourage in-site upgradation,
slum renovation, and progressive housing development with conferment
of occupancy rights wherever feasible, and to undertake selective
relocation with community involvement only for clearance of
priority sites in public interest;
- expand provision of water supply,
sanitation and other basic services in slum and other settlements
occupied by the poor; ensure proper maintenance of amenities
through community involvement and decentralised institutional
arrangements;
- integrate the provision of physical
amenities with basic services including maternal and child welfare
services and healthcare, structured on community participation
and involvement of voluntary agencies and management by local
bodies;
- promote international construction
and upgradation by poorer households through access to land
and services, through technical support, outlets for low cost
technology and materials, opportunities for skill upgradation
and access to housing finance on flexible terms;
- provide night shelters and sanitary
facilities for the footpath dwellers and the homeless.
Supply and Management
of land
Supply of serviced
land at affordable prices is a critical input for housing activity.
It is widely recognised that the effective operation of the land
market has been affected by the existing legal and regulatory
framework, lack of infrastructure, and the slow pace of release
of serviced land by public agencies. This, along with other economic
factors, has led to an unwarranted increase in land prices and
housing costs, and widespread speculation and profiteering
specially in larger cities. The exclusion of the majority of the
poor from the formal market, and their inability to build or acquire
legal shelter has led to the proliferation of squatter settlements
and unauthorised colonies. The Central and State Governments would
take initiative in:
- promoting a balanced pattern of
urbanisation in order to reduce the pressure on the metropolitan
and large cities, with due regard to the need to control unregulated
peripheral development on agricultural lands, unwarranted conversion
of land use and degradation of land resources;
- directing the activities of the
public agencies towards increasing the supply of serviced land
for various groups and essential public purposes, with a preponderant
pro- portion for the poorer sections;
- simplifying the existing legal
provisions and procedures relating to the acquisition of land,
to enable taking over the possession of land speedily with due
regard to the payment of adequate and timely compensation to
land owners on negotiated basis, or by schemes of participative
development of infrastructure under the town planning law or
otherwise;
- modifying development control
rules and norms of infrastructure provision and simplifying
building approval procedures in order to facilitate the housing
activity of different income groups especially the poor, and
to reduce the cost of housing;
- encouraging the involvement of
licensed private developers in land development, construction
and infrastructure provision, with adequate safeguards to protect
the consumers and increased supply of developed land for lower
income groups;
- reviewing on a city-wise basis
the use of land in the ownership of various public agencies
and formulating specific plans for the efficient utilisation
of these lands for the city's development.
- devising through new legislation,
or through the more effective use of existing laws, the optimum
use of land as a resource for housing and urban services and
suitable measures for the redevelopment of land occupied by
industries in a state of decline and/or causing environmental
pollution;
- using fiscal and municipal taxation
policy, including tax on vacant urban land, in order to curb
speculative activities, and to increase the supply of land;
- coordinating the assessment of
valuation of land and property by different central, state and
local agencies, for the levy of taxes, and for other purposes;
- building up an effective information
system of land and registration in the interest of efficient
management of land; and
- specifically increasing the access
of the poorer sections, women and vulnerable groups to affordable
service land in areas located near, or connected by cheap transport
to their work places.
In the light of suggestions
received from various sources such as the state governments and
the affected parties, amendments to the Urban Land (Ceiling and
Regulation) Act will be introduced in order to remove the inhibiting
effects of the legislation without diluting its social purpose,
so as to make available additional land for housing, especially
for the lower income groups.
Infrastructure
The National Commission
on Urbanisation has advocated concentrated investment in settlements
of various sites which can generate economic momentum, sustain
economic growth, promote balanced urbanisation, expand housing:
activity and facilitate equitable provision of services. It is
recognised that public and private investment in infrastructure
to expand the supply of service land needs to be stepped up through
enhanced budget provision as well as institutional finance. Organisational
arrangements would be strengthened for mobilising and increasing
the flow of funds for infrastructure. The Housing Policy envisages
actions to expand infrastructure facilities and services by:
- Increased investments to be made
by the Central, State and local agencies within the framework
of regional plans as well as the development of growth centres
in order to meet the rapidly increasing needs of serviced land,
and to improve the availability of services in different settlements;
- Adequate investments to increase
the coverage of urban population to 100% for potable water supply
and 75% for basic sanitation including the total elimination
of manual scavenging with particular attention to the larger
provision of basic amenities to the settlements inhabited by
the poor.
- Larger investments in public transport
and traffic network to serve the needs of the poorer sections
for cheaper and speedier access to workplaces and to integrate
transport, land use and shelter;
- Special attention to the development
of small and medium towns by strengthening their linkages with
the contiguous rural areas as a part of integrated planned development
of the regions, and steps for reducing the migration to larger
cities;
- Encouraging use of construction
technologies which are cost effective, incrementally upgradable
and environmentally appropriate;
- Support from state governments
for extension of infrastructure based on the participation of
the landowners or of enterprises in new growth centres or townships
and private developers or on innovative systems of infrastructure
leasing;
- Assistance by the State Governments
to the local bodies to ensure adequate cost recovery, proper
maintenance of services and upgradation of the capability of
the personnel in local bodies and functional agencies;
- Securing community support in
the design, installation and the upkeep of services within the
framework of the urban basic services strategy and rural development
programmes;
- Strengthening the financial viability
and implementation capacity of local bodies and functional agencies
and augmenting their resources on the basis of the recommendations
of the State Municipal Finance Commission.
Conservation
of Housing Stock and Rental
Housing
The National Housing
Policy envisages steps to be taken by the Central and State Governments
and the financial institutions for:
- appropriate modifications in the
building regulations;
- special schemes for the repair
and renewal of resident buildings having large number of occupants;
- fiscal and property tax incentives
and financial assists for expansion and upgradation of dwelling
units and proper maintenance of buildings;
- access to materials and technical
assistance. Investment in rental housing, especially for the
lower middle income groups will be stimulated by :
- suitable amendments to rent
control laws by state governments on the basis of the model
Rent Control Law;
- provision of houses for industrial
workers in new in trial areas or growth centres, by public
and private employers as a part of project cost, and for stimulating
by appropriate fiscal concessions and institutional fin under
industrial policy;
- encouraging individuals and
groups to construct house for partial for full letting
by access to land, institution finance, enabling regulations
and incentives in central, state and municipal taxation of
property and incomes.
Housing Finance
It is envisaged that
20 per cent of the requirement of investment in housing would
be met by specialised housing finance institutions, insurance
and banking sector, provident fund mutual funds, etc, and additional
mobilisation of household savings.
It is recognised
that the formal system meets a small proportion of the finance
required by different groups for a variety of housing activities,
and that the bulk of the population is outside its reach owing
to a variety of structural and operational inadequacies of the
system. It will be the objective of the Housing Policy to promote
easy access to finance for different housing activities and to
evolve an elastic and widespread resource mobilisation strategy
to tap household savings in the formal and informal sector. Steps
would also he taken for the removal of constraints to the flow
of finance into the housing sector, especially larger lending
to the poor and the informal sector.
In the interest of
long-term development of the mortgage market and assured resources
for the housing finance system, increasing proportion of the resources
of insurance sector, Unit Trust, Commercial Banks and Cooperative
banks will be channelled into housing with lending rates reflecting
the average yields of these resources.
Apart from diverting
increasing proportions of annual provident fund accumulations
for housing finance, housing-linked savings schemes for the provident
fund subscribers, the workers in the organised sectors and public
sector employees will be introduced.
It is envisaged that,
as the apex agency charged with linking the housing finance system
with the financial sector as a whole, the National Housing Bank
(NHB)
- facilitates the promotion and
regulation of housing finance institutions in the public and
private sector,
- refinances their operations, and
expands the spread of housing finance to different income groups
all over the country, while functioning within the overall framework
of housing policy.
The National Housing
Policy recognises the need to strengthen the Housing and Urban
development Corporation (HUDCO) and increase its resources for
meeting in a larger measure the requirements for shelter provision
for lower income groups in rural and urban areas including the
shelters and the slum dwellers and for expanding infrastructure
facilities in the urban areas.
The complementary
roles of different agencies and institutions in public and private
sector concerned with land development, house construction and
finance will be supported.
Innovative savings and lending instruments will be introduced
to integrate the housing finance system into the capital market
by enabling access of housing finance institutions to the funds
on a competitive basis with other financial institutions and by
permitting NHB and HUDCO to set up mutual funds for housing, apart
from their access to external aid. Steps would be taken in due
course to introduce a secondary mortgage system in order to attract
funds from a wide range of investors, including insurance and
provident funds, and to integrate housing finance with the overall
financial system.
The planning norms
for housing at the neighbourhood and institutional land will be
integrated with the lending guidelines of NHB and other financial
institutions. Appropriate ceilings on plinth area and institutional
finance will be stipulated in order to discourage large premises.
It is envisaged that
the housing finance system as a wole became self-financing in
the long run to meet the needs different income groups and purposes,
with longer repayment periods, graduated payments and simplified
procedure wherever necessary, to ensure affordable monthly installments
and larger coverage across different urban and rural poor.
It is recognised
that capital and interest subsidies for the urban and rural poor
be targeted carefully, and that improvement be made in the housing
finance procedures and shelter delivery system in order to bring
down the cost of shelter for to affordable levels. The subsidized
housing program like the Indira Awas Yojna for Scheduled Castes,
Scheduled Tribes and free bonded labourers will be restricted
to absolutely poor and the disadvantaged groups. The housing finance
systems will be so devised as to respond on fl terms to a variety
of shelter needs of the rural and urban poor.
The Government recognises
the need to make an in assessment of the role of informal credit
network and community based savings systems for housing and to
devise ways in establishing its links with the formal credit institutions
to enhance the access of the rural and urban poor to housing finance.
The cooperative housing
movement, especially, for lower and middle income groups, will
he given assured access to institutional finance to supplement
internal resources.
Building Materials
and Technology
As part
of the housing policy, it is
proposed to take steps for:
(a) stimulating
the increased production and availability
of conventional materials like cement,
steel and bricks as part of
industrial policy and promotion
of small scale industries, even
as steps are taken to economise
the use of scarce building materials
and to promote low cost and
environmentally appropriate technology
and use of indigenous resources;
(b) assured
access of rural households to traditional
materials including bio-mass and checks
on indiscriminate commercial exploitation
of forest resources, with due
regard to environmental preservation;
(c) encouragement
for the use by public and
private construction agencies of
materials based on industrial and
agricultural wastes, those based
on local resources and alternate
appropriate technologies;
(d) selection,
extension and promotion of proven technology
and building materials, and the
use of materials conforming to
standards and quality construction
through the efforts of Building
Materials and Technology Promotion Council
and state governments, and to
provide financial and other assistance
to entrepreneurs for the manufacture
and marketing of appropriate and
innovative materials;
(e) incorporating
the low cost technologies and
materials in the national standards
and specifications laid down by
State agencies, and further requiring
the public construction agencies to
draw up plans for the use
of cost effective technologies and
materials to the extent of
at least 10 per cent of the
total annual construction;
(f) training,
technology extension and skill upgradation
through a network of Building Centres
in urban and rural areas set
up by State agencies, research
bodies and voluntary agenciesand
dissemination of information to
the actual users and communities;
(g) building
up an extension network for
the spread of information on
housing schemes inputs and low
cost technology, shelter guidance
centres, retail outlets for materials;
and
(h) strengthening
existing R & D institutions and promoting
the setting up of R & D facilities
in other suitable institutions by
necessary financial support, and
by obliging all public and private
construction agencies to set apart
at least one per cent of their
annual expenditure for R & D in
housing.
Special Programmes
for Disadvantaged Sections
Housing Policy
would accord priority to the promotion
of access to shelter for the houseless,
inadequately housed and the disadvantaged
groups such as;
- households below the
poverty line in all settlements;
- rural landless labour
including artisans;
- the households dishoused
by development projects and the
victims of natural calamities;
- scheduled castes,
scheduled tribes and freed bonded
labour;
- widows, single women
and women headed households including
construction workers below the poverty
line; and
- physically handicapped.
Housing Needs
of Scheduled Castes/Scheduled Tribes:
It will be
ensured with the help of State
Governments and Central Ministries that the
developed land and housing units
in rural and urban areas constructed
by state and local agencies,
and those constructed by private agencies
with the help of financial
institutions, are allotted to families
belonging to the scheduled castes/scheduled
tribes in proportion to the
composition of the population, The
ongoing schemes for these communities
would be further expanded in
consultation with the National Commission
for Scheduled Castes and Scheduled
Tribes.
Housing Needs
of Women: Adequate attention will
be given while devising programmes,
to meet the specific needs
of women in disadvantaged circumstances,
in terms of joint or exclusive
title to land and house, access
to credit, home-base employment, maternal
and child welfare, hostels for
working women, and involvement in
the provision of shelter and services,
access to education and income-generating
opportunities.
Role of Government,
Private Sector and the Community
The magnitude
of the housing task calls for
the involvement ofseveral agencies
including the government at different
levels, the cooperative, the community,
and the private sector. The Government
will devise and implement strategies,
which will enable the various agencies
to complement the efforts of
one another and ensure the most
efficient utilisation of resources consistent
with National Environment Policy.
It would be the endeavour of
central and state governments:
- to act as the
provider for the poorest and
vulnerable sections and to facilitate
the housing activity of lower
and middle income groups;
- to control speculation
and profiteering in land and housing;
to modulate housing policy to
the diverse needs and re- source
endowments of different regions
in the country;
- to encourage, within
the framework of housing policy
and local planning, voluntary agencies
in efforts to upgrade shelter, extend
basic services, augment incomes
and promote environmental conservation;
- to promote decentralised
execution of housing schemes in
urban and rural areas under the
supervision of local bodies which
would be suitably strengthened within
the constitutional framework to
respond to the diverse needs
of local population;
- to reorient the
housing agencies at the Central,
State and local levels to act
more as promoters of housing
activity rather than builders of
houses and
- to concentrate increasingly
on the supply of developed
land and infrastructure, extension of
appropriate technology, assisting people
to take up construction and upgradation
of houses, and disseminating information
on housing schemes.
The Housing
Policy recognises group-based or cooperative
activity or community associations as
the principal form of housing activity
in many rural settlements and
large urban areas facing shortage
of land. Hence the cooperatives and
other community-based organisations will
be encouraged to take up various
shelter-related activities, especially for
slum dwellers and the rural poor,
assisted through preferential allotment
of land, access to finance
and fiscal support.
The private
developers and the organised sector
will be encouraged to invest
in various forms of housing
and land development by access
to finance, speedier approval of
schemes and other forms of support,
removal of constraints to assembly
and development land, while they
will be induced to devote a significant
proportion of the investment in
housing for lower and middle-income
groups at affordable prices and
conform to non-exploitative practices.
Government recognises
the vital need to integrate
housing activity and employment. Training, skill
upgradation and promotion of labour
intensive and decentralised manufacture
of building materials and construction
practices would be encouraged, in
order to maximise the economic
benefits of housing investment.
Environmental
protection will be emphasized in terms
of the basic norms and service
for settlements, for neighbourhood planning
and open spaces, control of pollution,
removal, disposal and utilisation of liquid and
solid wastes.
Through proper
attention to planning and architecture,
importance will be given to
the preservation of built up
heritage and monuments, structures of
architectural value, and the preservation
of special natural features.
Fiscal Policy
Fiscal incentives
will be provided in order to
promote desired investment in housing
activity by the private sector
and individuals, and to channel additional
savings for housing activity from
households and enterprises.
In order
to induce employers in the
organized sector including 1 industry
to provide housing for their
workers, incentives will be given
for investment in rental or
ownership housing, especially for low-income
employees.
Incentives will
be given to promote the manufacture
of new building materials and components
produced out of industrial wastes
like slush, and agricultural wastes,
and those which substitute the use
of scarce resources like wood,
and energy- intensive materials like
cement and steel.
In consultation
with the State Governments., the levy
of stamp duties and registration fees
will be rationalised, especially to
reduce the burden on housing for
lower income groups.
Government would
encourage housing schemes with approved
guidelines in major cities to
channel investment of Non-Resident Indians
in convertible foreign exchange in
residential property, and would extend
appropriate incentives including speedy clearance
by Central, State and local governments to stimulate
a sustained and large inflow of such investments.
Legal and Regulatory
Framework
The measures
for removing legal constraints would cover:
a) Provision in the
Land Reforms and other relevant Acts to confer homestead rights
on the occupants, ensure proper rehabilitation of those dishoused
by projects, protect tribal families ham eviction, preserve user
rights over forest and common lands, etc.
b) Revision of Master
Plan standards, land use plans, building bye-laws, and infrastructure
standards by the State Government and local authorities based
on the National Building Code as the guide. This will help reduce
the cost of shelter, enable efficient use of land and facilitate
housing activity;
(c) Making suitable
amendments in the laws and procedure governing land acquisition
in urban areas to ensure speedy assembly of compact lands with
due regard to the interests of landowners;
(d) Review and amendment
of laws and regulations relating to town planning, particularly
the norms and standards for in situ upgradation of low income
settlements and housing;
(e) Incorporation
of a separate chapter in the present cooperative laws on group
or cooperative housing activity in order to streamline their operation
and to remove existing constraints;
(f) Enactment of
Apartment Ownership Act in States not having such a law and suitable
amendments to the existing laws wherever necessary in order to
provide for the transfer of occupancy rights of individual owners,
management of common areas, and to enable the creation of charge
on the apartment by lending institutions;
(g) Steps for the
removal of constraints to the now of finance into housing and
services especially larger lending to the poor and households
in the informal sector through:- flexible procedures and collateral
requirements as well as repayment schedules amendments to the
National Housing Bank Act to pro- vide for speedy foreclosure
of mortgages by housing finance institutions refinances by NHB,
so as to augment the resources of housing finance institutions
further and help in creating a secondary market for housing mortgage;
universalisation of the system of English Mortgage, simplification
of procedure for investigation of title and the introduction of
the Torrens system of registration of title in a phased manner
in urban and rural areas. The implementation of this agenda will
be ensured through the joint efforts of Central and state governments
as early as possible.
Human Resources
Development
The development
of human resources is a crucial component
of the Housing Policy. Various
steps are envisaged such as:
- the training and
reorientation of architects, engineers,
planners, administrators, and others
to adopt low-cost and cost effective
approaches to planning of settlements
and housing;
- increased facilities
in the technical institutions and
colleges for the training of the
various professions related to housing;
- promotion of a large
scale of vocational courses at
the school and post school levels;
- formal and non-formal
training facilities on a widely decentralised
basis to upgrade skills of
construction workers, artisans and
petty contractors;
- upgradation of the
skills and improvement of the
working conditions of women construction
workers;
- greater involvement
of non-governmental organisations in
the training of construction workers,
both in the formal and informal
sectors and assistance to urban
self employed to organise themselves
in order to upgrade their
techniques and get better access
to working space, credit and
marketing channels; and
- provision of non-formal
training to facilitate maintenance
and improvement of housing stock
on a self-help basis.
Action Plan
Housing is a State
subject. Given the wide variations in housing needs and resource
endowments in the country, Governments of states and union territories
would have to play the primary role in formulating action plans
and programmes suited to local needs and conditions in consultation
with local bodies and citizen groups. Perspective Plans of action
and short term plans for the Eighth Plan will be formulated by
the states and union territories taking into account the following
factors:
(a) A complete estimate
of the number, type (economic category), and standards
of dwellings to be constructed or upgraded both by the private
and public sector and the units to be offered in the rental market.
(b) Resources flow
from the private, cooperative and public sectors, and the number
and type of dwelling units to be constructed by each sector in
states and union territories on ownership or rental basis.
(c) Separate projections
for rural and urban housing needs, including the resources required
for each sector.
(d) Distinguishing
shelter needs of those in possession of a plot and desire to construct
dwelling unit, those who are totally shelterless, those who can
afford to acquire a built-up unit and those in need of additional
amenities.
(e) The desired produce
mix and the resources required from State budget, institutional
finance and local contribution in order to provide adequate shelter
for different sections of the population. The Action Plans would
be formulated for each states/union territories within a time
frame of one year for time bound implementation by state and local
agencies with the involvement of Central institutions, private
and cooperative agencies and build into the Five Year Plan, city
and district development Plans. An appropriate management information
system on housing and urban services will be developed at various
levels of government under the supervision of an Inter-Ministerial
Group and a comprehensive Housing Census will be taken up during
the Eighth Fine Year Plan.
The National Housing
Policy will be periodically revised in the light of emerging needs
of different sections of the population and the demands of the
changing socio-economic conditions in different parts of the country.
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