India low-cost housing scheme likely to witness increase in subsidies ahead of elections
Business
Nearly 40m houses built with state subsidy in 10 years
NEW DELHI (Reuters) – India plans to announce an extension to Prime Minister Narendra Modi's flagship federal housing scheme in next month's budget and an increase in available subsidies for low-cost housing loans, three sources said, ahead of elections this year.
Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman, who will present an interim budget on Feb 1, is likely to raise allocations for low-cost housing by more than 15 per cent to 1 trillion rupees ($12 billion) for 2024/25 from 790bn rupees in the 2023/24 budget, two of the government sources said.
India, with a population of more than 1.4 billion, faces a shortage of more than 20 million houses in rural areas according to the government's internal estimates. The urban housing shortage, estimated at more than 1.5 million, was expected to double by 2030, according to industry forecasts.
Modi, who faces voters in national polls before May-end, launched the scheme in 2015 with the goal of "Housing for All."
India's federal and state governments have spent $29bn over the last five years under the programme to provide support for rural and urban low-cost housing, the government told parliament last month.
It was to end in December 2024 but the government could extend it for another three-to-five years as it has still to meet its target, said a third government source, declining to be identified because budget proposals are not public.
The Finance Ministry declined a request for comment.
Modi said on Monday his government had constructed concrete houses for around 40 million impoverished households since he became prime minister in 2014.
Opposition parties have said the scheme missed its original deadline of 2022 to meet its targets, and millions of people were still to get benefits.
RISING HOUSING DEMAND, COSTS
Officials want the finance minister to extend the programme and increase incentives due to a rise the cost of land and building materials.
Under the housing scheme, the federal government provides an interest-cost subsidy of between 100,000 rupees to 267,000 rupees to households that obtain bank loans for housing construction, in addition to subsidies from state governments.
Officials favoured an increase in financial assistance to about 200,000 rupees for each house in rural areas, and an interest subsidy on home loans of up to 5 million rupees in urban areas.
A proposal would soon be sent to the cabinet on interest subsidies for urban affordable housing, Hardeep Singh Puri, India's Housing and Urban Affairs said on Friday.
He declined to comment when asked about proposals for the housing sector in the budget.