Terhemen Ikyaave
Worldwide, mortgages take the lead as
the preferred means for owning a home. In countries such as
the United
Kingdom, USA, France, and other OECD (Organisation for Economic
Co-operation and Development) countries, it is rare to see people paying
outright for homes using savings, loans from friends, family members or
cooperative societies.In Nigeria, the widescale adoption of mortgages as a popular path to owning homes is still extremely low. This situation needs to change. It explains in part, the country’s high housing deficit that is estimated by experts to hover between 17 to 22 million housing units with trillions needed to make any significant dent on it. Fact is that housing is a capital-intensive venture.
A combination of low wages and high cost
of living give millions of Nigerians little room to save towards
purchasing or building their homes. For Nigeria to properly house its
citizens, greater efforts need to be made to bolster access to
affordable housing finance to enable them to own their homes.
To tackle the problem of access to
affordable housing finance, many countries across the world have
promoted the adoption of mortgages as the preferred path to
homeownership. The mortgage process entails the granting of monies to
obtain a home with good faith that the debtor will repay the loan with
interest attached to life of it. Both the debtor and lender benefit if
nothing goes wrong.
Over many years, the borrower repays the
loan, plus interest, until she or he owns the property free and clear.
Mortgages have helped millions of people all over the world buy homes.
Even if you do not have N5,000,000 cash, you can buy a N5,000,000 home
using a mortgage and pay gradually over time till you defray the loan.
So, essentially, a mortgage is a loan
that a lender, which could be a commercial or mortgage bank, gives to a
potential homeowner to purchase a house or other real estate. Before
mortgage lenders give loans, they check to see if you meet certain
requirements such as your income level, your financial ability to pay
back the loan. The lender can take ownership of, or foreclose on, the
property you have mortgaged if you do not repay the money borrowed, plus
interest.
High mortgage adoption leads to high
homeownership levels. In the United States it the proportion of
households that are occupied by the owners is over 65.1 percent. In the
United Kingdom, homeownership rate is above 67.69 percent and 90 percent
and 84 percent in Singapore and Indonesia, respectively.
As expected, the situation is different and worrisome in Nigeria. We boast a homeownership rate of about 25 percent, which is much lower than even Kenya – 73 percent, Benin Republic – 63 percent and South Africa 56 percent.
As expected, the situation is different and worrisome in Nigeria. We boast a homeownership rate of about 25 percent, which is much lower than even Kenya – 73 percent, Benin Republic – 63 percent and South Africa 56 percent.
Longer Term, Single-digit Interest Mortgages
It is against this backdrop that the role of the Federal Mortgage Bank of Nigeria (FMBN) in boosting access to affordable housing finance is so significant. Established as a wholesale mortgage finance institution the FMBN provides primary mortgage banks with low-cost funds to provide affordable mortgages to Nigerian workers. Notable features of FMBN mortgage loans include zero equity requirements for loans less than N5 million, and 10 per cent equity down payment for loans ranging from N5 million to N15 million. Others include single digit interest rates ranging from six to nine per cent per annum and long payment tenors of up to 30 years.
It is against this backdrop that the role of the Federal Mortgage Bank of Nigeria (FMBN) in boosting access to affordable housing finance is so significant. Established as a wholesale mortgage finance institution the FMBN provides primary mortgage banks with low-cost funds to provide affordable mortgages to Nigerian workers. Notable features of FMBN mortgage loans include zero equity requirements for loans less than N5 million, and 10 per cent equity down payment for loans ranging from N5 million to N15 million. Others include single digit interest rates ranging from six to nine per cent per annum and long payment tenors of up to 30 years.
FMBN’s housing products are available to
contributors to the National Housing Fund (NHF) Scheme, a social
savings scheme designed to mobilize long-term funds from Nigerian
workers, banks, insurance companies and the government to boost access
to affordable housing finance.
The Bank also has a rich and impressive
portfolio of social housing products that target a key and dominant
segment of the Nigerian population: low to medium income earners.
Consider the FMBN NHF Mortgage Loan and its unique structuring to serve the ordinary Nigerian worker. FMBN leverages funds from the NHF scheme to grant concessionary loans to its accredited Primary Mortgage Banks (PMBs) at a four per cent interest rate. The mortgage banks in turn use these funds to give loans to qualified workers that contribute to the NHF scheme at 6 percent interest per annum with payment tenors of up to 30 years.
Consider the FMBN NHF Mortgage Loan and its unique structuring to serve the ordinary Nigerian worker. FMBN leverages funds from the NHF scheme to grant concessionary loans to its accredited Primary Mortgage Banks (PMBs) at a four per cent interest rate. The mortgage banks in turn use these funds to give loans to qualified workers that contribute to the NHF scheme at 6 percent interest per annum with payment tenors of up to 30 years.
Loans under N5 million attract zero
equity down payment while loans ranging from N5 million-N15 million
attract. Subscribers are qualified to apply after only six months of
continuous contributions to the scheme. The terms and features of the
NHF Mortgage loan are highly affordable and reduce the financial
pressure on the meagre incomes of beneficiaries.
For comparison, interest rates on
housing loans in the open market range from 18 per cent to 25 per cent
per annum, while maximum loan repayment tenors hover between 10 – 20
years. Most commercial banks and mortgage lenders also require that
applicants provide between 30 percent to 50 percent equity contribution
before loans are processed and possibly approved for disbursement.
Balancing Housing Products and Workers’ Financial Capacity
Besides the NHF Mortgage Loan, FMBN has been innovating to ensure a proper match between its housing products and the financial capacity of an average Nigerian worker looking to own a home. In the past three years, under the dynamic leadership of Arc. Ahmed Dangiwa, the bank developed and introduced two creative housing products.
Besides the NHF Mortgage Loan, FMBN has been innovating to ensure a proper match between its housing products and the financial capacity of an average Nigerian worker looking to own a home. In the past three years, under the dynamic leadership of Arc. Ahmed Dangiwa, the bank developed and introduced two creative housing products.
The first is the individual Home
Construction Loan. The loan enables NHF contributors with unencumbered
land, appropriate land titles and approved building plans to undertake
self-construction. The loan provides up to N15 million to contributors
to the NHF scheme at seven per cent interest rate. Beneficiaries can pay
back over a period of up to 30-years depending on their age and number
of years left in service. The second product is the FMBN Rent-To-Own
Housing Scheme. The scheme offers an easy and convenient payment
arrangement towards homeownership for Nigerian workers. It makes it
possible for a Nigerian worker to instantly move into an FMBN-owned
housing property as a tenant and conveniently pay towards ownership of
the property in monthly or annual instalments over as long as 30 years
at an interest rate of nine per cent.
Another equally interesting and
worker-centric affordable home ownership product that FMBN has upscaled
significantly within the past three years is the home renovation loan.
The loan provides up to N1 million to enable beneficiaries who already
own their homes to carry out improvements. In the past three years
alone, about 43,000 Nigerians have benefitted from this facility.
FMBN has also revamped its legacy
Cooperative Housing Development Loan (CHDL) in line with the initiative
of the Minister of Housing, Babatunde Raji Fashola to adopt cooperative
societies as the channel for the aggregation and delivery of houses to
members of cooperative societies. The Minister launched the National
Cooperative Housing Scheme starting with the North Central and North
Eastern geopolitical zones in Abuja and Gombe on 17th and 20th February
2020, respectively.
The FMBN CHDL enables a cooperative
society that has acquired a plot of land to develop houses for
allocation to its members. Key features include tenors of up to 24
months with a moratorium of 12 months and interest rate of 10 per cent.
Up to N500 million is accessible by qualified cooperative societies
under the facility.
To strengthen collaboration and
confidence of workers who are the main contributors to the NHF scheme,
the bank approved and is currently executing a National Affordable
Workers’ Housing Scheme in partnership with the Nigeria Labour Congress
(NLC), Trade Union Congress (TUC) and the Nigeria Employers Consultative
Association (NECA), to deliver affordable houses for Nigerian workers.
The first phase of the scheme was launched in October 2018 aimed at
delivering about 1,400 units. Analysis show that a significant number of
the sites are advanced levels of completion and commissioning. Upon
completion, FMBN will provide mortgage loans to beneficiaries to enable
them to own those houses.
Bold Policy Actions Required to Reverse Trend
To reverse the housing deficit in the country, bolder and more aggressive policy actions are required by governmental authorities to strengthen both the demand side of housing in the country as well as the supply side. This entails supporting existing institutions such as the FMBN to scale their operations for greater impact. The recent announcement by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) that it plans to inject about N500 billion into the housing sector is a right step in the right direction.
To reverse the housing deficit in the country, bolder and more aggressive policy actions are required by governmental authorities to strengthen both the demand side of housing in the country as well as the supply side. This entails supporting existing institutions such as the FMBN to scale their operations for greater impact. The recent announcement by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) that it plans to inject about N500 billion into the housing sector is a right step in the right direction.
One sustainable way to guarantee
judicious usage of the funds and ensure direct impact on those who
really need homes in the country is leveraging the institutional
framework that the FMBN already provides and increasing the capacity of
the bank to give more affordable loans to Nigerian workers.
For one, the bank has the largest registry of potential homeowners in
the country. As at April 2020, FMBN had recorded over five million
contributors to the NHF Scheme, that the bank manages on behalf of the
government. The list of subscribers includes civil servants, workers in
the private sector, self-employed persons, traders etc with
comprehensive information about their income levels and financial
capacity to pay back mortgage loans. Deploying part of the CBN stimulus
funds to enhance FMBNs’ ability to provide loans to subscribers to the
NHF scheme will be a good start point for any housing intervention.
Housing Products that Target Low-Medium Income Earners
Another related point is sustainability and affordability. Interventions must be anchored on institutions and proven systems with track record of delivery and improvements over the years. FMBN has maintained a trajectory of high performance over the past three years under the Dangiwa-led management with key reforms that are gradually improving service delivery and creating historic impact. Overall, to achieve high mortgage penetration levels in the country and increase homeownership rates, especially within the low-medium income segments of the economy, there is of course the need to think outside the box giving the perennial stagnation of growth in the sector. But re-inventing the wheel is not an attractive option. A low hanging fruit is to empower strong institutions and systems that have shown capacity to deliver affordable housing to do more. FMBN presents one such platform as the CBN seeks to stimulate growth in the sector. The current board and management should, therefore, be encouraged, and its finances bolstered to enable it to create greater impact as the foremost government tool for social housing delivery.
Another related point is sustainability and affordability. Interventions must be anchored on institutions and proven systems with track record of delivery and improvements over the years. FMBN has maintained a trajectory of high performance over the past three years under the Dangiwa-led management with key reforms that are gradually improving service delivery and creating historic impact. Overall, to achieve high mortgage penetration levels in the country and increase homeownership rates, especially within the low-medium income segments of the economy, there is of course the need to think outside the box giving the perennial stagnation of growth in the sector. But re-inventing the wheel is not an attractive option. A low hanging fruit is to empower strong institutions and systems that have shown capacity to deliver affordable housing to do more. FMBN presents one such platform as the CBN seeks to stimulate growth in the sector. The current board and management should, therefore, be encouraged, and its finances bolstered to enable it to create greater impact as the foremost government tool for social housing delivery.
Ikyaave is a public policy analyst based in Abuja

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