Enabling Private Investment in Affordable Housing in Nigeria: Lessons from the Experience of the Millard Fuller Foundation Projects in Nasarawa State
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- To investigate the class of people targeted by the MFF housing projects.
- To determine whether these projects have effectively responded to the housing needs of low-income earners.
- To identify the strategies adopted in constructing and disposing of the MFF affordable housing in Luvu.
2. Affordable Housing and the Nigerian Context
The Housing Market and Implications of Private Sector Driven Affordable Housing in Nigeria
3. Materials and Methods
3.1. Case Study Area
3.2. Study Design and Instrument
- The government housing efforts and strategies seem to focus on and favour government workers; hence, on account of the structured form of their employment, there is a preponderance that relevant information like income, affordability, and access to NHF mortgages can be easily obtained from federal government workers.
- Government workers in Abuja have been driven into the suburbs in search of affordable homes and the MFF houses have provided an affordable destination for them.
3.3. The History of Millard Fuller Foundation Housing
4. Results
4.1. The Targets of MFF Projects
4.2. To Determine If the Project Meets the Need of the Low-Income Population
4.3. The Strategies Adopted by MFF
5. Discussion
5.1. Land Cost
5.2. Cost of Design
5.3. Using Conventional Materials vs. Local Counterparts
5.4. Cost of Funding
5.5. Flexible Payment Plan
5.6. Incremental Housing Pattern
6. Conclusions
- That the MFF projects at Luvu catered specifically for low–middle-income and middle-income earners and that unless the National Minimum Wage is improved, strategies adopted in this case may not satisfactorily advance the delivery of affordable housing for this income groups, much less cater for the no income and low-income groups.
- Developers may likely adopt practices that reduce the cost of investment, and these practices generally target the construction cost components like land, materials, and design.
- The decisions made by developers with respect to land and the design of the building may adversely affect end-users’ satisfaction; however, an incremental building approach may help to preserve both the developers and the end users’ interests in terms of a reduction in the cost of investment and the freedom to make choices for their homes based on their taste and resources, respectively.
- Embarking on a widespread infrastructural development will make development land available in all locations so that affordable housing development can no longer be confined to locations where services are lacking.
- Bulk purchase of housing units can help private developers make quicker returns on their investment and release them from any loan obligation as well as facilitate the disposition of houses on flexible terms to the end users.
- Access to an NHF mortgage can be improved for low-income earners by recognising other supplementary incomes in loan origination procedures.
- Flexible repayment plans should incorporate longer period of payment to reduce monthly payment for housing and increase residual income for end-users.
Future Research
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
1 | Fifty percent of the population will account for the no income group who already constitute 40.1% living below the poverty line of NGN 137,430/annum (USD 334) (as per the NBS estimate) and the rest shown in Table 2. |
2 | “Ok, so let me start with the location, we are essentially located here because land is cheap, there is a historical factor as well; the HFH was working in this community, so we already knew the people, and it was easy to buy land from them and to do other projects but essentially, the bottom line is that land is cheap in this area…”. (MFF) |
3 | “Ok. Because we are working here far away from town, really infrastructure doesn’t exist, we have had to provide all the needed infrastructure…. so essentially, we must do everything, and we cost it, and the people at the end of the day, pay for it…, so that cost includes all the infrastructure, land, construction, and a small profit element…”. (MFF) |
4 | “Another challenge is the distance from my workplace. The location of the estate is far, most of the people living in this estate work in Abuja,…so we have to travel a bit and be held in the traffic before we get to the office…” (Resident 7); “However, it is far from the city centre and where I work, and I spend NGN 2600 daily commuting to work every day…”. (Resident 4) |
5 | “…our designs as I said are very basic, eventually, we are working around a single-room model. …and we have typical designs for studio apartments, one-bedroom apartments, we have designs for two-bedroom apartments, we hardly do three-bedroom, it’s just because of the cost, we want to stay below the 5-million-naira mark. We have bathroom facilities, we keep it minimal, usually just one bathroom for the house…”. (MFF) |
6 | “The room is not big, it’s quite small when you compare what we have here to others particularly in some estates, if I have the opportunity, I will make some changes” (Resident 5); “…the estate developers also take advantage of the fact that their activities are not being supervised to use substandard materials to construct the house. For example, once it rains, my house absorbs water and despite painting the inner walls, the paint peels off. So, we now use wall tiles to the height of the room to make sure that the water doesn’t penetrate and affect the furniture in the room…”. (Resident 4) |
7 | “We have in the past used the compressed hard block technology in my last organisation HFH, we did a lot of houses with compressed hard blocks, and we discovered that yes it was cheaper than concrete blocks, but we were paying more for labour. … so at the end of the day, the cost kind of balanced out and we saw that there wasn’t that more of an advantage in using compressed hard blocks or stabilised blocks than in using concrete blocks…but essentially we are working with the normal concrete blocks technology that everybody works with, it’s known, it’s available and also it engages a lot of local labour because we see our work not just as construction but also empowering the community so the more people that can be empowered in the process of the housing delivery, the better for the project…”. (MFF) |
8 | “So, as I mentioned, the first project we did is zero profit, zero interest project with the FCH in the US, which was our first project that was financed entirely by donor funds; then we now got a loan from REALL UK to begin the Grand Luvu project it was a soft loan at 5% interest rate. Grand Luvu II on the other hand, was financed partly with equity, and then we were being paid by FHF in instalments. That’s how we were able to finish Grand Luvu II … So, they sort of took it over, they paid us and just took it. Then the Grand Luvu I which was financed by REALL, they bought it when it was completed”. (MFF) |
9 | “…it’s an apartment that cost about 360,000 naira and people wondered: can this be real in Abuja? And they asked: is that the cost of the rent or the cost of the house?… the challenge we had when people came to our doorstep and found it to be so cheap is that the whole of Abuja now ended up on our doorstep and with just donor funding coming in, we could not build more than what we had on hand so most of the people had to be turned back…”. (MFF) |
10 | “ok, initially, we were told that we should pay 10% of the money, after the 10% of the money, they can give you the key to the house and you start paying may be through a mortgage, but for my case, I didn’t go through mortgage because, by that time, the mortgage did not accept the percentage I applied for…”. (Resident 2) |
11 | “… but MFF will only ask you for a percentage, when you pay that percentage, you will be given the key to your house without completing your payment and then, they spread out the balance over a period of time and that for me is the greatest help they can give to the less privileged” (Resident 2); “Some work and some don’t, so it’s not easy for somebody to count 2 million, 3 million easily like that to pay, instead of that, they will have discouragement” (Resident 3); “the salary paid to workers is nothing to write home about but if you are removing every month you may not feel it”. (Resident 1) |
12 | “…Getting the initial payment was the greatest problem because I did not have money saved anywhere…so I cried to a sister and … she asked me to send my account number, I was like, is this true? … The initial payment is most people’s problem but compared to where you will buy a piece of land and build and enter, it’s still better…”. (Resident 3) |
13 | “… I didn’t go through the mortgage because they did not accept the percentage I applied for. …in my own case, we own the whole building…so, we are paying NGN 50,000 in a month because the building was given to us at NGN 4. something million [So you and your husband are contributing to pay?] yes [that means you are also a government worker] my husband is a government worker, but I do business”. (Resident 2) |
14 | “At a point because I took it in 2018 but they’re still on the process of the mortgage, so when I now decided to opt out from the beginning of this year and I said OK, thank God, I know I can, at least afford it from my salary and I decided to pay the money for five years and get over it even though it is not going to be easy, but then I said that instead of waiting for mortgage endlessly and afterall, it’s a business and they are not giving you free. Though it might be painful, but I just decided to endure it and make the payment within five years. So that is the plan”. (Resident 11) |
15 | “At first, it was going for like 10 years. To make it like easier for us so that the amount they will be deducting from our salary will not be too cumbersome. But in the long run, an issue arose that made them reduce the number of years we’re going to pay it for. So, they reduced it to five years… Before, when it was for the period of 10 years, we were paying like NGN 27,000 naira, but now that it has reduced to five years, we are paying like NGN 46,000, something”. (Resident 7) |
16 | “… so essentially, we are in incremental housing, so the idea is that you may not have all the money to do your two-bedroom unit, but you can start off with what you have, start off with the studio apartment, with time, put another room more, with time put another room more … Actually, one of the designs you might see is the studio apartment and the foundation made already for the additional room, then you also have the one-bedroom unit that’s expandable to two-bedroom unit, so essentially that’s what we are doing”. (MFF) |
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Country | Estimated Population (2016–2019) | Estimated Housing Deficit |
---|---|---|
Nigeria | 185–200 million | 8–22 million units |
Ghana | 28–30 million | 1.7–2.6 million units |
Kenya | 45–52 million | 2 million units |
Uganda | 37–43 million | 1.7–2 million units |
South Africa | 56–58 million | 2.5 million units |
Ethiopia | 98–103 million | 1.2 million units |
Income Category | Earning Capacity | Earning Capacity in Terms of the NMW (NGN 30,000) |
---|---|---|
No income | 25% of the NMW | 7500/month |
Low income | More than 25% of the NMW or equal to NMW | 7600–30,000/month |
Low–middle income | More than the NMW but less than four times the NMW | 31,000–120,000/month |
Grade Level | Monthly Salary | 30% of the Monthly Salary | Loan Repayment over 15 Years | Remarks | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
NGN5 m | NGN8 m | NGN15 m | ||||
3/15 | 38,893 | 11, 668 | 42,192.84 | 67,508.55 | 126,578.52 | Not Qualified |
6/15 | 51,708 | 15,512 | Ditto | Ditto | Ditto | Not Qualified |
9/15 | 114,309.25 | 34,293 | Ditto | Ditto | Ditto | Not Qualified |
12/15 | 145,628 | 43, 688 | Ditto | Ditto | Ditto | Qualified for 5 m |
15/15 | 244,498 | 67,349 | Ditto | Ditto | Ditto | Qualified for 5 m |
Average House Prices from the Private Sector (NGN) | National Housing Programme Houses across Nigeria (NGN) | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Bedrooms | Abuja | Lagos | Kaduna | Flat in Condominium | ||
2 | 26,670,000 | 16,912,494 | 1 bedroom | 2 bedrooms | 3 bedrooms | |
3 | 51,740,000 | 29,637,327 | 7,222,404 | 9,148,378.4 | 13,241,074 | |
4 | 84,330,000 | 62,740,000 | 35,796,239 | Bungalow | ||
5 | 142,680,00 | 87,970,00 | 49,280,015 | 9,268,751 | 12,398,460.2 | 16,491,155.8 |
ID | Project | Number of Units | Cost (NGN) | Construction Method | Funding | Design |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Fuller estate | 60 | 240,000 | Concrete block and Nigerite-produced drywall | Fuller Centre for Housing (FCH) USA | Studio apartment started in 2007 with the last set completed in 2013 and fully occupied |
2 | Camp Luvu I | 13 | 5.9 m | Concrete block construction | Self-funded | Three- and four-bedroom apartments |
3 | Aso Fuller estate | 12 | 3 m and 4 m | Concrete block construction | MFF in partnership with Aso savings and loans ltd | One- and two-bedroom semidetached bungalow completed and fully occupied. Started in 2009 and completed in 2010 |
4 | Selavip I and II | 36 | 360,000 and 960,000 | Concrete block and Nigerite-produced drywall | Selavip and Etex group | Studio apartments started in 2014 and were completed in 2015 |
5 | Grand Luvu I | 268 | 1.65 m, 2.9 m, and 3.9 m | Concrete block construction based on an incremental model a | MFF with funding from Reall, UK (loan at 5%) and bought over by FHF | Studio expandable to one-bedroom and one-bedroom expandable to two-bedroom semidetached bungalow started 2015 and completed in 2016 |
6 | Camp Luvu II | 32 | 3.6 m and 5 m | Concrete block construction based on an incremental model | MFF with funding from partner Reall | Studio and two-bedroom started in 2020 and ongoing |
7 | Grand Luvu II | 400 | 2.9 m and 3.9 m | Concrete block construction | An initiative of FHF completely funded and handed over to it | Studio and two-bedroom semidetached bungalow, which took off in November 2017 and was completed in August 2018 |
Resident | Employment | Monthly Income (NGN) | Type of Accommodation | Number of Persons in the Household | Payment Cost and Plan | Residual Income for Other Household Expenses (NGN) | Cost of House (NGN) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Retired driver of a federal ministry | Not disclosed | Two-bedroom | 2 | Paid in full with proceeds from the sale of land inheritance | Not applicable | 3 m |
2 | Federal ministry employee | Not disclosed | Expandable studio and one-bedroom | 5 | Paid 10% of the price and pays NGN 50,000 monthly for 7 years | Not disclosed | 4.55 m |
3 | A laid-off staff of a private bank and currently has no job due to age | Not disposed | Two-bedroom | 2 | Borrowed from a friend to pay the initial 10% deposit and makes monthly payments to complete within 5 years | Not disclosed | 3 m |
4 | Federal civil servant | 136,000 | Two-bedroom | 3 | Originally ten years but shortened to five years and pays NGN 60,000/month | 76,000 | 3.5 m |
5 | Federal civil servant | 125,000 | Two-bedroom | 3 | 50,000/month for 5 years | 75,000 | 3.5 m |
6 | Federal civil servant | 40,000 | One-bedroom | 1 | 19,500/month for 15 years | 20,500 | 2.9 m |
7 | Federal civil servant | 135,000 | Two-bedroom | 4 | 46,000/month for five years | 89,000 | 4 m |
8 | Federal civil servant | 110,000 | Two-bedroom | 4 | 64,000/month for five years | 46,000 | 3.9 m |
9 | Federal civil servant | 116,000 | Two-bedroom | 5 | Received as a gift | Not applicable | Not applicable |
10 | Federal civil servant | 110,000 | Two + one-bedroom | 6 | 90,000/month for five years | 20,000, supplemented by wife (average of 10,000/month) | 6.8 m |
11 | Federal civil servant | 100,000 | Two-bedroom | 6 | 50,000/month for five years | 50,000 | 4.2 m |
12 | Federal civil servant | 180,000 | 3 | 5 | 80,000/month for five years | 100,000 | 7 m |
Resident | Acquired from | Ease of Acquisition | Satisfaction Derived | Discomforts or Dislikes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | MFF | Sense of ownership, security (have something to fall back on after retirement), comfort and freedom form harassment of the landlord, safe environment | Poor salary, limited access to mortgage | |
2 | MFF | Sense of ownership, no harassment, no paying of rent, sense of relief and comfort | Unfinished building, bad road | |
3 | MFF | Ability to own a house with small funds, friendly mode of payment, space around the house for garden, communal outdoor space for recreation | Unfinished building, bad road, short payment period | |
4 | FHF through workplace cooperative | Bureaucratic processes and the payments involved | No longer having to pay rent in lump sum, sense of ownership, no harassment, sense of pride, ease of payment | Poor quality, not up to standard, small room spaces, low height, unable to fix ceiling fan with such height, wall absorbs water and destroys the painting, a lot of spending on transportation, low wage, more amenities at the city, failure to secure a mortgage, higher monthly payment due to short repayment period, inaccessible road, inadequate water supply |
5 | FHF through workplace cooperative | Scheme plan poorly communicated by the government, uncertainty about their ownership status, difficult processing | Better to pay flexible to own than rent, ease of ownership | Rooms are small, will like to make some changes with the open space, spends more time commuting to work, afraid to lose job as a result, problem of water and electricity, bad road |
6 | FHF through workplace cooperative | Federal government acquired at cheaper price from the developer and are selling at high prices | Sense of comfort despite the inconvenience of lack of amenities, ease of ownership, security | The spaces are small, spend more on transportation, inadequate water, and no electricity, but that is a national problem |
7 | FHF through workplace cooperative | Ease of ownership and affordability of ownership | Room spaces are small, delineation of spaces is not functional, location of the estate is far, traffic is usually heavy and ends up late at work, short amortisation period and poor communication resulted to higher monthly payment, no water, which adds to the cost of running the house | |
8 | FHF through workplace cooperative | The payment plan and status poorly communicated; the house was formerly cheap until the federal government bought them | Sense of ownership and the flexible way to own a house, the cost of building from the scratch is high and cannot be achieved with low income, communal space for sports, security of the source of accommodation | Thinks that low-income housing means not adequate provision, location is inaccessible, no adequate water, no electricity |
9 | FHF through workplace cooperative | Stress of transportation because of heavy traffic, spends a lot on transportation, lesser productivity, no electricity, stressful and costly to get to place of work | ||
10 | FHF through workplace cooperative | Better to have mine than pay rent | Longer time on the traffic to get to town | |
11 | FHF through workplace cooperative | Acquiring through government required lots of documentation and payments | Flexibility to own a house, sense of ownership, cheaper to own than build from the scratch, safe environment | Cheap material for construction, feels unsafe when it rains due to rain penetration, spends time commuting to work, no water, bad road, stress travelling on the road to work due to heavy traffic. Inadequate provision of water, power supply in Nigeria is problematic |
12 | FHF through workplace cooperative | Security, ownership, no longer paying rent, safe environment | Inconveniencing to shorten the payment period because it increases monthly payment and salaries are poor. No amenities like water, it is inadequate for the number of residents |
Construction cost Reduction Strategies | |||
---|---|---|---|
Targets | Method | Reason | Consequences |
Land cost | Sited project on the outskirts of Abuja | (i) Land is cheaper in Luvu, (ii) There is already an existing relationship with the community, which made the land transaction easier, (iii) Nasarawa state has a good land registration system | Location lacked services and infrastructure, so they were provided by the organisation and the cost was factored into the cost of development. The end-users complained that there is no access road to the project location being far from local transportation and towns. |
Design cost | The design was limited to bungalows and comprised mainly studios and one- to two-bedroom apartments, the room spaces are compact. | To keep the cost of construction and the materials required for construction as low as possible. | The cost of units was much lower, but the end-users were dissatisfied with the outcome, so some of them had to make some changes to suit their design taste |
Material cost | Adopted the conventional construction materials in Nigeria, e.g., concrete block, concrete, cement, etc. | To keep the interactive cost of material, construction technology and labour low | Because labour was available for this type of construction, the project resulted in the engagement of the local community, hence employment doubled. |
Funding cost | Obtained funding from Fuller Centre for Housing, USA, | To reduce cost | It resulted in fewer and slower production, but cheaper apartments sold at no profit and interest (Table 5) |
Used soft loan from Reall UK at a 5% interest rate. | To facilitate production at a reduced cost | Increased production but at an interest rate of 5% to cost of construction; the obligation to the loan was eventually paid for with a bulk purchase of the homes by the Family Homes Fund | |
Disposition strategies | |||
Selling cost | Set up a flexible payment plan | To assist end-user to pay gradually | Enabled end-users to pay gradually, which suited their variable income and encouraged payment with multiple sources of income |
Completed a portion of the house and built the rest up to the concrete oversite | To reduce the cost of construction as well as the selling cost. To enable the end-users to make decisions for their home according to their need and resources. | Encouraged end-users to acquire their dream home in a less stressful manner. |
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Nwachukwu, L.; Rodrigues, L.; Kiamba, L. Enabling Private Investment in Affordable Housing in Nigeria: Lessons from the Experience of the Millard Fuller Foundation Projects in Nasarawa State. J. Risk Financial Manag. 2023, 16, 411. https://doi.org/10.3390/jrfm16090411
Nwachukwu L, Rodrigues L, Kiamba L. Enabling Private Investment in Affordable Housing in Nigeria: Lessons from the Experience of the Millard Fuller Foundation Projects in Nasarawa State. Journal of Risk and Financial Management. 2023; 16(9):411. https://doi.org/10.3390/jrfm16090411
Chicago/Turabian StyleNwachukwu, Lilian, Lucelia Rodrigues, and Lorna Kiamba. 2023. "Enabling Private Investment in Affordable Housing in Nigeria: Lessons from the Experience of the Millard Fuller Foundation Projects in Nasarawa State" Journal of Risk and Financial Management 16, no. 9: 411. https://doi.org/10.3390/jrfm16090411
APA StyleNwachukwu, L., Rodrigues, L., & Kiamba, L. (2023). Enabling Private Investment in Affordable Housing in Nigeria: Lessons from the Experience of the Millard Fuller Foundation Projects in Nasarawa State. Journal of Risk and Financial Management, 16(9), 411. https://doi.org/10.3390/jrfm16090411