25 July, 2009

Turner's 3 Laws and Housing Microfinance

“THE MOST COMMON OBJECTION to changes in public policy which would increase a user’s control of housing at the expense of centralized institutions is that standards would be lowered as a result. The standards the objectors have in mind, however, are not something that can be achieved with available resources, but, rather, represent the objector’s own notion of what housing ought to be.”
- John Turner, Freedom to Build
[1]

John F. C. Turner is one of the founding pillars of what has come to be known as the support (or enablement) paradigm of housing. Based on extensive experience and research, Turner introduced a whole new philosophy of housing in his books Freedom to Build and Housing By People: Towards autonomy in building environments. What made Turner’s approach radical was that he was able to view and describe housing from the point of view of the dweller, rather than that of the policy maker, housing expert or program designer. When seen from the point of view of the low-income earning dweller, housing decisions that seemed completely uninformed or illogical from the perspective of the social elite make perfect sense in the context of the household’s livelihood strategy and framework. Although his writing is now over 30 years old and predates the emergence of microfinance, Turner’s thought has significant relevance to housing microfinance for households around the poverty line.

In his introduction to Housing by People: Towards autonomy in building environments, Colin Ward presented what he described as Turner’s three laws of housing, with which he summarized the essence of Turner’s writing and thought. [2] I find these “three laws” to be both true and relevant in housing microfinance design. The following is a paraphrase of Turner’s laws:

Turner’s First Law: When dwellers control their housing process, it is better for them and the housing environment.

Turner’s Second Law: The important thing about a house is what it does in the life of the dwellers rather than what it physically is.

Turner’s Third Law: Dwellers can tolerate or accept a problem with their housing much more readily if it was a result of their own action or choice as opposed to that of another.

Traditional housing programs tend to focus on the provision of “low cost houses.” (Low cost often appears to be in relation to the income of the program designers and funders rather than to the actual affordability for people below or near the poverty line.) In such programs, there is a focus on the features of the house being provided. Critical housing choices of design, location, costs and delivery are made by the program designers. Although there is sometimes “consultation” with some representatives of the target group, the ultimate housing choice that is made by the individual participant households often revolves around whether or not to participate on the provider's terms. This type of housing program stems from what that designers believe housing ought to be.

In developing housing microfinance product and services, microfinance institutions can also be tempted to focus on the features of the house as the product. It is difficult to develop a focus on the low-cost house into effective housing microfinance for several reasons:

1. Cost: The focus on the house as a product (built to a certain standard) usually leads to a house that is too expensive for households with low incomes to afford. This can result in their inability to pay for the services or the need for heavy subsidy. Either of these will make it nearly impossible for a housing microfinance intervention to achieve and sustain service at scale, if it does not collapse altogether.

2. Demand: It is not uncommon for a provider to develop a housing product that it sincerely believes low income households need and will appreciate only to be surprised that demand for the product is not nearly as great as expected. When the product does not make sense from the client’s point of view, they will simply not use it and demand will be low. A housing microfinance program must meet effective demand if it is to grow and prosper as well as serve a social good. To do so, it must understand and approach housing for the position of the dweller that is going to pay for the services. What the outcome of housing microfinance loan means to the dweller is infinitely more important than what it means to the institution.

3. Customer Satisfaction: Problems  with a housing unit that was prescribed and delivered through a program or institution are not unlike malpractice for the medical field. If someone controls the process of building his or her own house, a crack in the wall can be easily tolerated or fixed. If an institution controlled the process, the same crack in the wall becomes a constant source of aggravation for the client and can negatively impact the relationship between the dweller and the institution.

Dweller control of the housing process is more likely to result in a house that fits with the household’s livelihood strategy, making it more likely to be sustainable at the household level. Housing microfinance can allow dweller control of the housing process and suit the individual household needs and desires. We often, however, start to impose upon clients the needs and desires of our institution in relation to their housing. In doing so, we run the risk of violating Turner’s three laws and creating a housing microfinance intervention that will fail to have significant impact. Although effective microfinance institutions tend to be market oriented and client responsive, they must still resist the temptation to have housing microfinance conform to what they believe housing ought to be instead of what it can be when control of the housing activity is left to the dwellers within the context of their own livelihoods, needs and wants.


[1] Turner, J. & Fichter, R. eds. (1972). Freedom to Build. NY: MacMillan, 148.
[2] Turner, J. (1976). Housing by People: Towards autonomy in building environments. NY: Marian Boyars, 5-6.

18 July, 2009

Introduction to Housing and Microfinance (a blog)


Housing microfinance has come into its own. Filling a void
created by the limitations of traditional housing finance and building on the
lessons of the recent microfinance revolution, housing microfinance is now a
discrete area of practice that intersects housing finance and
microfinance
” (Daphnis and Ferguson, 2004).

That is how Franck Daphnis introduces housing microfinance in the opening chapter of Housing Microfinance: A Guide to Practice (2004). Although the last decade has shown a tremendous growth in housing microfinance across the globe, I would argue that in Sub-Saharan Africa housing microfinance is still in its infancy. Whereas Daphnis rightly defines housing microfinance through the lens of its financial nature, I would note that housing microfinance, perhaps not quite as obviously as it would seem, is also the intersection of housing and microfinance. And so I begin this blog on housing and microfinance…

For two decades I have worked in Africa in the housing sector with Habitat for Humanity,  a Christian, non-governmental organization (NGO). Having approached  housing in a variety of ways over the years, I have come to the conclusion that housing microfinance is an effective and more realistic way to improve housing conditions than many of the other more traditional governmental and institutional approaches to housing.

True to my housing background, I look at housing microfinance as a housing delivery .mechanism. It is a type of financial intermediation that addresses a significant bottleneck in the housing process of many  households across the globe that live below or near the poverty line. While it is not a panacea, housing microfinance could make a significant positive impact in the housing conditions of Sub-Saharan Africa. Well designed and implemented housing microfinance has the potential to be sustainable for the financial service provider, sustainable at the household level and result in tangible improvements in living conditions. Products and services that can simultaneously achieve all three of those variables will be the key to the success of housing microfinance as a housing delivery mechanism in Africa.

In his book Housing Without Houses: Participation, flexibility, enablement, Nabeel Hamdi (1999) defined provision and support as two paradigms of housing that are at times in conflict. Housing is surprising ideological in nature and the dynamics between “providers” and “supporters” is not far removed from those of liberals and conservatives, Republicans and Democrats or the religious and agnostic. I am an unabashed “supporter” and believe that the degree to which a housing microfinance intervention aligns with the support side of a housing paradigm continuum will have a strong influence on the degree to which the intervention will be sustainable to both the institution and household. I would expect someone from the provider side of the continuum to reject many of the positions I will express in this blog, because the two paradigms have very different ways of interpreting what the housing “problem” is (if there is one at all) and thus what an appropriate resulting intervention would look like.

In the coming months, I shall elaborate on these statements and present some of the things I believe about housing and housing microfinance and why. These are merely my opinions based on a limited degree of experience. They are admittedly experiential and subject to change as more information is gathered and the housing and financial landscapes change over time. I greatly encourage and request feedback and comments, particularly from alternative points of view or personal experience. I hold my positions fairly strongly, but I am also a believer in good debate between two opposing views as an engine of learning when it stays focused on the issues and facts and delves ever more deeply into the underlying theories espoused and theories in use.

I expect to write on topics that include subjects such as:


1. Housing Paradigms and Housing Microfinance: How does our approach to housing influence housing microfinance design? Although often only implicit, even people who do not consider themselves to be housing practitioners have inherent beliefs about housing that influence housing microfinance design from their unspoken assumptions. “What makes a good house?” This is a value-laden question, the answer to which generally points to one’s personal housing paradigm.

2. Incremental Building and the Finance Bottleneck: Using housing paradigms as a foundation, I would like to look at how housing microfinance fits in with what is actually happening on the ground for the vast majority of low income households. It is generally acknowledged that the poor around the world build incrementally. In the absence of any realistic hope for a formal building process or traditional housing finance, incremental building is primarily an informal housing finance strategy for the poor. I will argue that housing microfinance has the best chance of being sustainable at the institutional and household level if it understands incremental building in its local context and is designed to fit into dwellers’ own informal and incremental processes. To microfinance institutions (MFIs) and other financial service providers who base their products and services on understanding a market, this should come naturally. For those of us in the wider housing field, it is strangely more difficult to see at times.

3. Construction Technical Assistance (CTA): The degree to which construction technical assistance should be part of a housing microfinance intervention is a matter of hot debate. It is similar to the debate over whether business development services should be included with small business loans. It often boils down to a “quality vs. quantity” argument of sorts.

4. Technical Aspects: What are some design elements of housing microfinance? I hope to present some ideas and case studies for review.

5. Institutional Aspects: Is there such a thing as a housing microfinance institution and if so, is it viable? What are the keys to reaching scale and achieving broad access to affordable housing finance?

I look forward to discussing these topics and more. New to blogging, I am not sure whether this will even be read, but I just thought I would start putting some thoughts out there for whatever they are worth.