صدى البلد البلد سبورت قناة صدى البلد صدى البلد جامعات صدى البلد عقارات
Supervisor Elham AbolFateh
Editor in Chief Mohamed Wadie
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For A Better Urban Future


Sun 01 Jun 2025 | 03:59 PM
Anacláudia Rossbach- United Nations Under-Secretary-General Executive Director, UN-Habitat
Anacláudia Rossbach- United Nations Under-Secretary-General Executive Director, UN-Habitat
Anacláudia Rossbach

In Asia-Pacific, the population is projected to grow by another 1 billion over the next 25 years. Cities, already home to over 2.3 billion people, are experiencing rapid urbanization that outpaces housing and infrastructure development. More than 500 million people lack access to basic water supply, and over 1 billion to adequate sanitation. Across both high- and low-income countries, housing costs remain high, and vulnerability to climate risks is increasing.

Housing as a necessary driver of development

Adequate housing means more than walls and a roof—it provides safety, dignity, and opportunity. Secure tenure, clean water, sanitation, and access to energy are foundational to health, education, and economic mobility.

UN-Habitat’s experience offers a roadmap. In Iraq and Yemen, we have supported post-conflict housing and land rights. In Kenya, Uganda, and Burkina Faso, we have upgraded informal settlements and slums. This work must be scaled up as a central pillar of national development strategies. It is not only socially just but also economically sound.

Housing contributes up to 18% of GDP and 10% of jobs in emerging markets. It connects to critical sectors like construction, finance, technology, and basic services—generating local development and resilient communities. A study by IIED for Habitat for Humanity found that access to adequate housing in informal settlements could raise national income by up to 10.5% and prevent more than 730,000 deaths annually—an impact greater than eradicating malaria.

The bold choices we need

Governments must reclaim leadership in shaping housing systems for the public good. This requires moving beyond short-term market corrections to long-term investment in housing as public infrastructure. Solutions must be diverse and adapted to local contexts—public rental housing, social housing, cooperatives, community-led models, slum upgrading, and incremental housing. The best models are those built on social, cultural, and institutional strengths.

Strong governance is essential. National governments set clear policies and regulatory frameworks, while local and regional governments—closer to communities and the people they serve—are best positioned to implement housing solutions, coordinate land use, and engage civil society. Strengthening the capacity and financing of local authorities is critical to ensure housing systems meet community needs and support inclusive urban development.

Building coalitions at all levels is equally vital. Civil society, academia, social movements, and the private sector all have critical roles to play. Partnerships help address the complexity of housing by combining expertise, resources, and perspectives. Housing is already rising to the center of political agendas in regions around the world and showing growing momentum for systemic change.

Mobilizing resources and scaling solutions

From Vienna’s use of land banking and rent control to maintain housing as a public service, to Thailand’s Community Organizations Development Institute (CODI) promoting collective savings and participatory planning—successful models already exist. Uruguay’s Ayuda Mutua and Brazil’s “Entidades” programme empower cooperatives to build homes with state support. In Puerto Rico, the Cano Martín Peña Community Land Trust secured land rights for thousands in a flood-prone district, demonstrating how community ownership drives equity and resilience.

Anticipating urban growth through inclusive planning is key. Ethiopia’s integration of peri-urban areas into expansion strategies has curbed unplanned sprawl and created more connected, inclusive neighborhoods.

To maximize social, environmental, and economic benefits, financial strategies must align with urban regulations. Housing—comprising around 60% of the built environment—shapes cities and drives emissions and resource use. Integrating finance and policy is essential for sustainable development, with tools such as subsidies, investment programmes, and innovative financing mechanisms supporting energy efficiency, resilience, and affordability.

Governments must also manage land more efficiently—preserving its economic, ecological, and social functions. Compact, well-planned urban extensions can reduce sprawl and protect productive land and fragile ecosystems, especially in peri-urban areas.

To ensure access to adequate housing for all, especially low-income and marginalized groups, governments must mobilize both international and domestic resources. This includes strategic public finance—using subsidies, tax reliefs, long-term loans, and incentives—and better leveraging domestic savings, private investments, and land-based finance mechanisms.

With international housing finance heavily skewed—higher-income regions receive 22 times more funding per person in poverty than sub-Saharan Africa—there is an urgent need to close this gap. Enhancing property taxation, land value capture, and digital land systems, combined with smart local revenue collection, can unlock significant domestic financing.

Investment in stable, adequate, and affordable housing delivers major socioeconomic returns—from improved health and education to reduced spending on justice and social protection. The message is clear: housing can no longer be treated as a speculative investment. It is a human right and a foundation of sustainable development. We must see housing as a public good, anchored in sound policy and inclusive governance.

The cost of inaction is growing inequality and instability. Solutions exist. It’s time to scale them up.