Nigeria
W
|
ith
its launch recently by the Federal Government, the Nigerian Mortgage Refinance
Corporation (NMRC) has come to stay as an integral part of the country’s
financial system, with special focus on housing finance and/or the mortgage
system.
NMRC
was established with the primary aim of resolving access to affordable housing
finance and, more importantly, as a focal point for creating an enabling
environment for housing finance by playing a strong developmental role in
supporting the improvement of land and legal framework and housing development
and construction.
The
company, which sits as a financial intermediary between the Nigerian capital
market and financial institutions that provide mortgage loans to average
working Nigerian citizens, is the new hope for low-income earners who currently
cannot afford the cost of a mortgage loan.
The
expectation is that the successful implementation of this project would
significantly increase the ability of the working Nigerian to buy a home by
supporting the current housing demand with access to affordable finance through
mortgage lending banks, while developers have to meet this cash demand for
housing by building homes of real value and not of speculative value.
In
her speech at the launching of the company, Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, the minister
of finance, announced that out of the $300 million interest-free loan from the
World Bank, $25 million would be used for the establishment of a mortgage
guarantee facility for lower-income borrowers, while another $25 million would
be used to support the Federal Mortgage Bank of Nigeria (FMBN) to enable it to
strengthen its programme on mass housing and also to pass on some of it to
microfinance institutions to also enable them to on-lend to low-income people
who want to carry out renovation work on their homes.
NMRC
will provide mortgage-lending institutions with access to long-term finance at
an affordable interest rate, thereby enabling mortgages to be issued by these
institutions to Nigerians at longer tenors and affordable rates. This will
afford average working Nigerian citizens an opportunity to buy a home and
conveniently pay for it.
Estate
developers’ reason for not delivering affordable housing has always been
centred on land and the cost of its acquisition. Other reasons are lack of
effective demand from the low-income buyers who are the target of such
developments, which significantly narrows the profit margin.
With
the establishment of NMRC, land may not be a major impediment to affordable
housing development anymore because some of the states which have been selected
as pilot scheme for the implementation of the refinance company are being
encouraged to lower their cost of land and remove the encumbrances to its
acquisition.
In
his keynote address at the launch of the company, President Goodluck Jonathan
listed four key enabling steps necessary for the company. These include the
implementation of a computerised land registration system that would make it
easier for citizens to receive certified titles, ownership and occupancy,
verify certificates and transfer mortgages.
The
second step is the reduction of land registration costs to users to as low as 3
percent, while the state governors should consider delegating Governor’s
Consent to speed up land registration processes, just as he said there should
be streamlining of foreclosure processes in case of default.
“The
effort of the World Bank through the $300 million loan is expected to be
supplemented by the private investors who will develop mass and good quality
housing and creatively create home ownership options,” the president said,
observing that as the housing market develops, there would be the need to
ensure that it sustainably reaches the low-income groups.
Source: BusinessDay
No comments:
Post a Comment