Is PTI’s affordable housing programme just old wine in a new bottle?
Pakistan’s affordable housing crisis is a definitive instance of both market and government failure.
Slums, katchi abadis, unplanned or informal, illegal settlements proliferate because the market and government have failed repeatedly to provide adequate housing to low-wage workers and their families.
In Karachi alone, nearly 60 per cent of the city’s population resides in informal settlements.
The country’s housing problem was predicted long ago by renowned urban planner Constantinos Doxiadis, who was hired in the 1950s by the government of Pakistan to design a new capital and reconstruct Karachi.
As Doxiadis observed the massive migrations, staggering post-Partition overcrowding and ensuing challenges of shelter for thousands of people in Karachi, he correctly foresaw the issue of livable shelter would become a colossal challenge for cities across Pakistan, unless a comprehensive housing plan was put in place.
Related: Where the poor live
When Doxiadis proposed to the Planning Commission a comprehensive housing and settlement plan, his ideas were were summarily rejected.
The development economists within the Harvard Advisory Group, which was attached to the Planning Commission, were particularly disparaging of Doxiadis’ proposal.
Ironically, they believed a national housing plan for Pakistan was akin to a disaster in the making.
In the Planning Commission’s universe, investment in a housing plan was not complementary to Pakistan’s development agenda for prosperity.
In fact, as the historian Markus Daechsel writes in a clever book called Islamabad and the Politics of International Development in Pakistan, economists saw housing as an unnecessary distraction and the least remunerative form of development activity.
This significant moment in Pakistan’s early history pretty much sealed the fate for a comprehensive national housing plan for the poor.
I see this period as a watershed moment for Pakistan because it set the tone for the colossal failures that have ensued in the provision of housing for the poor.
Repeated failures
From ad hoc housing policies, intermittent regularisation of informal settlements, to increasing land/real estate speculation, to failed low-income housing schemes, state-authorised land grabs, urban renewal and gentrification and commercial enterprises clamouring for space in urban centres, all of this has ensured the poor continue to be squeezed into precarious spaces or shunted to the margins.
For Pakistan’s poor, the struggle for shelter has become a dangerous, violent and politically charged process that is dependent on extractive institutions and political compromises that hardly ever lead to tenure protections.
While evictions and displacements are now mediated by court cases and the ballot box, these interventions do not guarantee the ordinary citizen the right to hold on to an 80-square-yard house in a so-called illegal/informal settlement.
If anything, court cases produce uncertainty as residents have no idea how long they will remain in place.
A case in point is the Karachi Circular Railway, where nearly 28 settlements or 4,653 households (according to my estimates, based on different sources) will be displaced soon due to the Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf (PTI) government’s new planning agenda to upgrade the nation’s railways.