Econ3x3.jpg

 

 

What will housing megaprojects do to our cities?

 

 

Ivan Turok, Econ3x3, Creamer Media, Johannesburg, 10 Nov 2015

 

The building of large numbers of housing units in isolated greenfield
locations have had detrimental side effects on our cities over the last two
decades. Yet a series of new megaprojects, designed to accelerate the
delivery of housing, is now on the cards. Because they are to be built on
cheap peripheral land, these schemes threaten to reinforce urban
fragmentation, inefficiency and exclusion. 

 

Introduction  

 

A spate of megaprojects has been proposed by the Department of Human
Settlements in order to boost the delivery of housing and to benefit from
economies of scale. The growing national interest in massive housing
developments coincides with the 2014 appointment of Lindiwe Sisulu as the
minister of human settlements. She is a forceful politician with a sense of
urgency. Megaprojects are her department's main response to the collapse of
the programme of building houses: 'The delivery of houses has dropped by 25%
over the past five years . [this] is very serious especially against a
backdrop of increasing urbanisation and promises made'. She sees the
megaprojects as some kind of 'Marshall Plan' for housing. 

 

Strangely, quite a different urban agenda that is based on longer-term
considerations and a broader view of efficiency is being followed elsewhere
in government. Its key objectives include urban compaction, integration and
densification by encouraging new housing on well-located land within cities
and improving public transport connections between neighbourhoods and jobs.
Urban concentration also promotes human interaction and enhances
productivity, which is vital for social cohesion and national economic
competitiveness. Proponents of this approach are the National Treasury and
the metropolitan municipalities. 

 

In housing policies all over the world there is a tension between building
on greenfield sites beyond the urban boundary, and filling in on brownfield
sites to consolidate existing urban areas. The dilemma is acute in South
African cities because their average population density rises with the
distance from the centre. This is unusual and the situation has deteriorated
in the last two decades. The question that arises is whether the housing
issue is being tackled in a way that promotes urban efficiency and social
justice. 

 

Why the upsurge in megaprojects? The RDP housing predicament 

 

The post-apartheid government's RDP housing policy has focused on building
large quantities of small units to eliminate the housing backlog and ensure
better living conditions for the poor. Almost three million such homes have
been delivered to date - an impressive achievement by international
standards. Government spending on housing and associated facilities has
risen from 1% of GDP in 1994 to 3.7% today. This is a faster rate of
increase than expenditure on social grants, health or other social
programmes. 

 

Despite this sustained effort, the housing backlog has risen from an
estimated 1.5 million to 2.3 million units. There has been a big increase in
informal dwellings, particularly in urban areas. A recent upsurge in
community discontent and social unrest has focused attention on fundamental
limitations of the RDP housing model. These include the falling rate of
delivery, inflated costs, the poor quality of construction, and suspicions
of patronage, fraud and corruption in allocating tenders and managing
waiting lists for housing. 

 

Another problem is the location of RDP settlements on the periphery of towns
and cities, where land is readily available and cheaper than in built-up
areas. This has reproduced and entrenched the apartheid spatial pattern of
dormitory settlements in isolated locations. According to the Gauteng
Premier, David Makhura, they are 'incubators of poverty' rather than assets
to help lift people out of hardship. Poor families trapped on the periphery
have to bear the brunt of long and complex journeys to work and school.
Average commuting times for black households have increased from 88 to 102
minutes a day over the past decade (see Kerr article, Econ3x3, October
2015). 

 

The housing megaprojects are clearly framed as a response to poor
communities' impatience at the slow pace of socio-economic progress. The
electoral position of the ruling party is under greatest threat in the major
cities, where population growth is strongest and the demands for enhanced
social provision are loudest. Political leaders have hurriedly announced
plans to develop a string of major urban expansion schemes and satellite
towns. Each is designed to accommodate tens of thousands of urban residents
in better living conditions. 

 

The ruling party's belief that it is politically imperative to boost the
supply of houses has been confirmed by the ANC's secretary-general: 'Human
settlement is at the heart of mass resentment. However, it can be turned
around to be the driver of improvement in electoral fortunes for our
movement'. 

 

A closer look at megaprojects

 

Evidence presented by departmental officials to the parliamentary portfolio
committee reveal a growing crisis in the provision of housing: outputs are
declining, costs are rising, shoddy workmanship has to be rectified,
procurement processes are bogged down, assembling land is slow, and external
conflict is growing. The committee, in turn, feels the department should:
'be more proactive, act with speed and have aggressive interventions where
they are needed'. 

 

Crucial details of the proposed megaprojects are hard to come by. There is
still no policy framework (such as a housing white paper) to explain the
approach. Yet the logic is apparent from public statements. Minister Sisulu
has talked about getting each of the nine provinces to '...launch an
integrated human settlement Ministerial project that will deliver a minimum
of 10 000 houses and 5 000 service stands over five years. This will include
20% rental units, 20% gap housing, 30% BNG (RDP) houses, 10% social housing
and 20% serviced sites for employer assisted housing'. 

 

R298 billion over five years

 

The provinces are currently preparing proposals for 50 megaschemes. The
total price tag is expected to be R298 billion over five years. The
megaprojects will cater for different lower-income groups and provide a mix
of housing types within the same settlement, thereby promoting a degree of
social diversity. 

 

Key policy considerations include eliminating blockages in the housing
pipeline - such as red tape, zoning bottlenecks and access to land for
development - in a bid to 'woo the private sector'. The minister has
stressed the need to formulate a master spatial plan to coordinate the
provision of housing and infrastructure. She believes that megaprojects will
be more efficient for her department to oversee than lots of smaller
projects, given that the department lacks technical capacity and is
under-spending its budget. Similar problems afflict many of the provinces
and metros. 

 

Centralised co-ordination within government is seen as the solution to deal
with the systemic constraints that undermine delivery. Megaprojects are the
vehicle to connect the activities of different parts of government and drive
a focused agenda by issuing large contracts to private sector developers to
design and execute integrated housing schemes. 'War rooms' are to be
established to prioritise megaprojects over other developments and to
fast-track decision-making through regulatory hurdles. This is supposed to
create delivery momentum and to establish implementation systems that enable
housing developments to be scaled-up across cities and towns. According to
the minister, megaprojects are '.intended as game changers in the process of
spatial planning in our country. They . will shape the future of human
settlements development.' 

 

Questions and concerns

 

The energetic commitment to tackle the poor state of many urban settlements
is laudable. However, the assumption that megaprojects are the appropriate
solution needs careful scrutiny. There are five basic concerns: 

 

1. The choice of language suggests a mechanical process of delivery - seen
in the references to pipelines, blockages and delivery engines. There is no
mention of encouraging innovative, greener or more inclusive urban designs,
or planning for decent living and working environments. The efficiency of
government processes is uppermost, with little consideration given to the
efficiency for households (e.g. travel costs and distances to work), the
efficiency of the wider economy (e.g. congestion resulting from sprawl), or
the fiscal implications for urban municipalities of creating and maintaining
sprawling infrastructure networks. 

 

2. Megaprojects are presented as a neat solution to government's
fragmentation, procedural complexities and capability constraints. There is
no analysis of what lies behind the housing backlog, no financial appraisal
of mega-project principles and no awareness shown that other policies could
help to meet the rising demand for housing; these include infill projects,
backyard rental, refurbishment of empty buildings and medium-density rental
property. Furthermore, a wave of smaller projects is likely to create jobs
and build entrepreneurial capacity in SMMEs more effectively. 

 

3. There are more risks associated with a 'mega approach' than with others.
There is a greater chance of major cost overruns, quality problems,
undervalued environmental degradation, and the effects on social and
economic development are easily overstated. These are universal concerns
with large-scale infrastructure projects. All the evidence suggests that
megaprojects are no quick fix for institutional weaknesses within
governments. Rather, a well-prepared, capable public sector is crucial if
the burdens and benefits of megaprojects are to be distributed fairly. 

 

The dangers seem particularly pertinent in this instance:

 

.    The mega-project objectives are rather fuzzy in relation to both the
substance of what is to be achieved and the process of getting there. 

 

.    There is little sign of preparatory work such as feasibility studies,
technical appraisal of options, and consultation with public, private and
civil-society stakeholders. 

 

.    Details of the institutional arrangements are unclear, yet these are
crucial to efficiency. 

 

.    The scale of these initiatives may force cooperation based on
centralised control between government departments. This could undermine
checks and balances within the system. 

 

.    Transparency and accountability are vital to minimise rent seeking and
to avoid decisions being based on vested interests. 

 

 

Given the inflated expectations and high levels of public funding already
envisaged, the megaprojects could end up fuelling the politics of mistrust
and backfire on their political champions.    

 

4. The location of the megaprojects is a major concern, bearing in mind the
importance of urban spatial structure for access to opportunities, economic
efficiency, social integration, public infrastructure costs and the impact
on the environment. 

 

The geographic location of the megaprojects is influenced above all by the
need for large areas of cheap land that are relatively straightforward to
develop. In addition, economies of scale in construction require that the
projects be started from scratch on free-standing greenfield sites. Most of
Gauteng's proposed settlements are on the urban periphery. The five largest
megaprojects are particularly distant from the formal economy at the core of
the region. Four of these five schemes also overlap with sensitive
environmental areas identified by the Province's environmental unit. 

 

Such 'megasettlements' could thus remain as dormitories that are isolated
from economic opportunities for decades, while people lucky enough to have
jobs will have to commute even further than they do today. Sustainable local
jobs will require the development of a local economic base, which needs
externally traded activities rather than personal services that are
dependent on local spending power. The chances of success seem slim. There
are powerful forces promoting the concentration of businesses in central
Gauteng, including risk aversion and inertia: it is very difficult to shift
the pattern of private investment in industry and tradable services. In
Cosmo City, it has a taken nearly a decade for supermarkets, petrol stations
and other formal retail outlets to open there, let alone tradable
activities. 

 

5. A related risk surrounds the financing of parallel urban agendas within
government (outlined in the introduction) and the fiscal position of the
metros. An anaemic macroeconomic performance implies a constrained
medium-term fiscal outlook. The public sector will struggle to borrow the
capital required to invest in additional bulk infrastructure.
Decision-makers will look to private finance for infrastructure - but this
market is undeveloped and private funds could come with unexpected strings
attached. The projects could also jeopardise the financial position of the
metros, which have to bear many of the costs of dispersed infrastructure and
the related service delivery. Metros are likely to be concerned that the
megaprojects will divert public and private resources from core built-up
areas. 

 

The political priority attached to large greenfield initiatives on the urban
periphery could persuade private residential and retail property developers
to follow suit. This would compromise the viability of recent public
investments in rapid-transit bus systems and other urban infrastructure
designed to increase the population density of city cores. 

 

Conclusion 

 

It appears that the urban consolidation agenda could be jeopardised by a
somewhat desperate attempt to launch housing megaprojects. The spatial
imperative of such projects - urban expansion - conflicts with the need to
densify cities in order to reduce commuting costs and other distance-related
inefficiencies. It is vital to reconcile the urban expansion and
densification approaches in order to avoid the duplication of effort and the
dissipation of scarce resources. If both continue, it is likely that both
will fail.  

 

If these processes were aligned, it should be possible to elevate the
position of urban policy and give it greater traction. This alignment would
require high-level political endorsement, along with stronger municipal
systems of spatial planning and development. 

 

A fundamental requirement would be for the government to do more to free up
land for development within the big cities rather than on the periphery. The
state has been far too passive and reactive in their approach to urban land
since 1994. Surplus state-owned property should be released for infill
development to create mixed-use neighbourhoods with jobs and amenities.
Municipalities should do more to help transform run-down districts and
derelict buildings into decent and affordable living and working
environments.  

 

This kind of city-building endeavour has the potential to harness the energy
of all sectors of society, not just to build more houses, but to create
better cities. The state should create the conditions and opportunities for
the private sector, non-profit organisations and households themselves to
exercise their own creativity and initiative to develop more liveable and
productive places, without having to wait for the government as the
conductor that determines when and what the orchestra should play. 

 

 

.    Written by Ivan Turok, Acting Executive Director, Human Sciences
Research Council Article first published on Econ3x3

 

 

From:
http://www.polity.org.za/article/what-will-housing-megaprojects-do-to-our-ci
ties-2015-11-10

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 



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