Mexican housing must become denser, better planned - study
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[September 01, 2022]
By Kylie Madry
MEXICO CITY (Reuters) - Mexican housing
must become denser and better planned to provide adequate living options
to lower-income parts of the population, according to a new study, which
said the country's current residential construction was largely
unregulated.
"The real problem is providing housing to the bottom 20% or 30%," said
Albert Saiz from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT).
According to Saiz, the prevalence of self-built, one-family homes is a
bigger problem than growing numbers of "digital nomads" - remote workers
living in Mexico but earning disproportionately large salaries from
abroad - which have been the focus of criticism since the coronavirus
pandemic took many jobs online.
The study argued that, to meet the population's needs, Mexico's urban
housing must become three or four times denser than current levels,
meaning that one- to two-story housing should be replaced by multi-level
apartment buildings.
It also found that more than six in ten new builds are constructed by
owners, not developers, and are largely unregulated.
"We're talking about a market where, you know ... 40% or 50% of people
have access to credit," Saiz said.
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A general view shows houses in Mexico
City, Mexico April 24, 2018. REUTERS/Gustavo Graf
With credit penetration on the rise but still low, many Mexicans,
unable to apply for mortgages, turn to building their homes
themselves, Saiz said.
"In the next 20 years, hopefully, 0% of homes are self-produced," he
said, instead arguing for more formal, regulated construction.
Colombia, which is also a focus of the study, had seen success with
social housing programs and could be a template for Mexico, Saiz
argued. Social programs in Mexico had until now largely offered
housing only to a few, mostly middle-class groups, he said.
"Now (Mexican policymakers) need to extend that template and devote
the resources for the bottom 20%," he said.
La Haus, a Colombian company that buys and sells housing and
provides a marketplace for others to do so, supported the research.
(Reporting by Kylie Madry; Editing by Bradley Perrett)
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