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BACKGROUND TO THE COUNTRIES’ HOUSING POLICY AND HOUSING ACT PRESENTATION TO THE PORTFOLIO COMMITTEE 9 JUNE 2009
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BACKGROUND TO THE COUNTRIES’ HOUSING POLICY AND HOUSING ACT PRESENTATION TO THE PORTFOLIO COMMITTEE 9 JUNE 2009.

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Page 1: BACKGROUND TO THE COUNTRIES’ HOUSING POLICY AND HOUSING ACT PRESENTATION TO THE PORTFOLIO COMMITTEE 9 JUNE 2009.

BACKGROUND TO THE COUNTRIES’ HOUSING POLICY AND HOUSING ACT

PRESENTATION TO THE PORTFOLIO COMMITTEE 9 JUNE 2009

Page 2: BACKGROUND TO THE COUNTRIES’ HOUSING POLICY AND HOUSING ACT PRESENTATION TO THE PORTFOLIO COMMITTEE 9 JUNE 2009.

INTRODUCTION

• In order to fully appreciate the complexity of the housing programme it is considered essential to have a common understanding of the range of human settlements that we need to serve.

• There is no internationally agreed classification but this presentation attempts to provide an interpretation of the South African settlement context

Page 3: BACKGROUND TO THE COUNTRIES’ HOUSING POLICY AND HOUSING ACT PRESENTATION TO THE PORTFOLIO COMMITTEE 9 JUNE 2009.

OUTLINE

1. Towards a common understanding of South African human settlements

2. The White Paper on a New Housing Policy and Strategy for South Africa, 1994

3. The Housing Act, 1996

Page 4: BACKGROUND TO THE COUNTRIES’ HOUSING POLICY AND HOUSING ACT PRESENTATION TO THE PORTFOLIO COMMITTEE 9 JUNE 2009.

TOWARDS A COMMON UNDERSTANDING OF HUMAN SETTLEMENT TYPOLOGIES

Page 5: BACKGROUND TO THE COUNTRIES’ HOUSING POLICY AND HOUSING ACT PRESENTATION TO THE PORTFOLIO COMMITTEE 9 JUNE 2009.

Settlement types• Human Settlements are complex social and

economic phenomena which exist along an urban-rural continuum

• No commonly agreed definition of “urban” and “rural” and clearly defined physical & social boundary between urban and rural areas

• Urban and rural areas are economically, socially and environmentally interdependent

• Major differentiation in the actual form of housing and types of tenure

Page 6: BACKGROUND TO THE COUNTRIES’ HOUSING POLICY AND HOUSING ACT PRESENTATION TO THE PORTFOLIO COMMITTEE 9 JUNE 2009.

Settlement continuum

Primary citySecondary

citySmall town

Dense rural area

Dispersed rural areas

Intensive farming

Large scale commercial

farmingMetro area

Extensive farming

Subsistence farming

Urban Rural Continuum

Freehold and rental tenure Communal land rights Local arrangementsCommunal land rights

Migration

Remittance & grants

Good and services

Page 7: BACKGROUND TO THE COUNTRIES’ HOUSING POLICY AND HOUSING ACT PRESENTATION TO THE PORTFOLIO COMMITTEE 9 JUNE 2009.

Differentiation of settlements by tenure arrangements for

housing policy purposes

Page 8: BACKGROUND TO THE COUNTRIES’ HOUSING POLICY AND HOUSING ACT PRESENTATION TO THE PORTFOLIO COMMITTEE 9 JUNE 2009.

Settlements with secure freehold and rental tenure

Page 9: BACKGROUND TO THE COUNTRIES’ HOUSING POLICY AND HOUSING ACT PRESENTATION TO THE PORTFOLIO COMMITTEE 9 JUNE 2009.

Metropolitan areas

• Region wide urban footprint• Established formal core of industrial,

commercial and suburban development;• Formal townships, hostels and backyards;• Informal settlements with significant

subsidised housing on the periphery;• High rates of (circular) migration• Highest concentrations of urban poor;• Examples –Gauteng, Durban, Cape Town

Page 10: BACKGROUND TO THE COUNTRIES’ HOUSING POLICY AND HOUSING ACT PRESENTATION TO THE PORTFOLIO COMMITTEE 9 JUNE 2009.

Gauteng Metropolitan Area

Page 11: BACKGROUND TO THE COUNTRIES’ HOUSING POLICY AND HOUSING ACT PRESENTATION TO THE PORTFOLIO COMMITTEE 9 JUNE 2009.

Durban metro

Page 12: BACKGROUND TO THE COUNTRIES’ HOUSING POLICY AND HOUSING ACT PRESENTATION TO THE PORTFOLIO COMMITTEE 9 JUNE 2009.

Primary cities

• Typically former colonial administrative centres

• Province wide urban footprint • Provincial hubs of mining and industrial

areas• Limited suburban stock, formalised

townships extended with subsidised housing and informal settlements;

• Examples – Kimberly, Bloemfontein, East London

Page 13: BACKGROUND TO THE COUNTRIES’ HOUSING POLICY AND HOUSING ACT PRESENTATION TO THE PORTFOLIO COMMITTEE 9 JUNE 2009.

Primary city

Page 14: BACKGROUND TO THE COUNTRIES’ HOUSING POLICY AND HOUSING ACT PRESENTATION TO THE PORTFOLIO COMMITTEE 9 JUNE 2009.

Primary city

Page 15: BACKGROUND TO THE COUNTRIES’ HOUSING POLICY AND HOUSING ACT PRESENTATION TO THE PORTFOLIO COMMITTEE 9 JUNE 2009.

Secondary cities

• Established formal core of mining, commerce and suburban development;

• Often linked to old former “homeland” settlements in vicinity

• Formal townships with backyards; informal and traditional settlements,

• Significant subsidised housing on the periphery;

• Rapid urbanisation and extreme levels of poverty;

• Examples – Nelspruit, Rustenburg, Polokwane, Witbank-Middelburg

Page 16: BACKGROUND TO THE COUNTRIES’ HOUSING POLICY AND HOUSING ACT PRESENTATION TO THE PORTFOLIO COMMITTEE 9 JUNE 2009.

Secondary city

Page 17: BACKGROUND TO THE COUNTRIES’ HOUSING POLICY AND HOUSING ACT PRESENTATION TO THE PORTFOLIO COMMITTEE 9 JUNE 2009.

Secondary city

Page 18: BACKGROUND TO THE COUNTRIES’ HOUSING POLICY AND HOUSING ACT PRESENTATION TO THE PORTFOLIO COMMITTEE 9 JUNE 2009.

Small towns

• Typically a small commercial, administrative, farming or tourist node;

• Small, ageing formal housing stock; • Former township usually spatially integrated

over time with the ‘old’ town through subsidised housing and informal settlements;

• Diminished social services • Struggling economies, almost non-existent

prospects for formal employment • Examples – Wakkerstroom, Lady Frere

Page 19: BACKGROUND TO THE COUNTRIES’ HOUSING POLICY AND HOUSING ACT PRESENTATION TO THE PORTFOLIO COMMITTEE 9 JUNE 2009.

Small town

Page 20: BACKGROUND TO THE COUNTRIES’ HOUSING POLICY AND HOUSING ACT PRESENTATION TO THE PORTFOLIO COMMITTEE 9 JUNE 2009.

Small town

Page 21: BACKGROUND TO THE COUNTRIES’ HOUSING POLICY AND HOUSING ACT PRESENTATION TO THE PORTFOLIO COMMITTEE 9 JUNE 2009.

Settlements with communal tenure

Page 22: BACKGROUND TO THE COUNTRIES’ HOUSING POLICY AND HOUSING ACT PRESENTATION TO THE PORTFOLIO COMMITTEE 9 JUNE 2009.

Settlements with communal tenure

• Households in rural areas who enjoy functional security of tenure (communal tenure);

• Conflicting / contested land rights

• Variety of densities

• The poorest of the poor - elderly, women and children pre-dominate

• Lack of social and economic development opportunities

Page 23: BACKGROUND TO THE COUNTRIES’ HOUSING POLICY AND HOUSING ACT PRESENTATION TO THE PORTFOLIO COMMITTEE 9 JUNE 2009.

Settlements with communal tenure

• Economy - subsistence farming but dependent on grants and remittances

• Some overcrowding, leading to poor utilisation of land;

• Subject to seasonal / circular migration

• Examples – Ingonyama Trust KZN, former “homeland” areas Mpumalanga, Limpopo, Eastern Cape.

Page 24: BACKGROUND TO THE COUNTRIES’ HOUSING POLICY AND HOUSING ACT PRESENTATION TO THE PORTFOLIO COMMITTEE 9 JUNE 2009.

Communal land tenure (KZN)

Page 25: BACKGROUND TO THE COUNTRIES’ HOUSING POLICY AND HOUSING ACT PRESENTATION TO THE PORTFOLIO COMMITTEE 9 JUNE 2009.

Medium dense rural settlement (EC)

Page 26: BACKGROUND TO THE COUNTRIES’ HOUSING POLICY AND HOUSING ACT PRESENTATION TO THE PORTFOLIO COMMITTEE 9 JUNE 2009.

Communal land tenure - homesteads

Page 27: BACKGROUND TO THE COUNTRIES’ HOUSING POLICY AND HOUSING ACT PRESENTATION TO THE PORTFOLIO COMMITTEE 9 JUNE 2009.

Displaced dense settlements

• Informal settlements on traditional land• Apartheid settlement patterns• Characterised by absence of formal

industrial or commercial activity• Dependent on urban remittances and

government grants• Out-migration and split urban-rural

lifestyles common• Examples - Bushbuckridge

Page 28: BACKGROUND TO THE COUNTRIES’ HOUSING POLICY AND HOUSING ACT PRESENTATION TO THE PORTFOLIO COMMITTEE 9 JUNE 2009.

Displaced dense rural settlement

(Mpumalanga)

Page 29: BACKGROUND TO THE COUNTRIES’ HOUSING POLICY AND HOUSING ACT PRESENTATION TO THE PORTFOLIO COMMITTEE 9 JUNE 2009.

Farm settlements

Page 30: BACKGROUND TO THE COUNTRIES’ HOUSING POLICY AND HOUSING ACT PRESENTATION TO THE PORTFOLIO COMMITTEE 9 JUNE 2009.

Intensive commercial farming areas

• High yield farming;

• Characterised by low labour inputs except in times of cropping;

• Usually served by agri-villages / small towns

• Examples – Fruit farming areas, Western Cape, Eastern Cape, Mpumalanga

Page 31: BACKGROUND TO THE COUNTRIES’ HOUSING POLICY AND HOUSING ACT PRESENTATION TO THE PORTFOLIO COMMITTEE 9 JUNE 2009.

Intensive farming

Page 32: BACKGROUND TO THE COUNTRIES’ HOUSING POLICY AND HOUSING ACT PRESENTATION TO THE PORTFOLIO COMMITTEE 9 JUNE 2009.

Large commercial farms

• Significant consolidation over past decade• Increasing mechanisation• Marked by labour evictions in response to

land legislation• Driving growth in poor populations in small

towns – “poverty traps” • Low labour need except in cropping season• Worker housing varies from very poor to

good• Central Free State – grain farming

Page 33: BACKGROUND TO THE COUNTRIES’ HOUSING POLICY AND HOUSING ACT PRESENTATION TO THE PORTFOLIO COMMITTEE 9 JUNE 2009.

Large commercial farms

Page 34: BACKGROUND TO THE COUNTRIES’ HOUSING POLICY AND HOUSING ACT PRESENTATION TO THE PORTFOLIO COMMITTEE 9 JUNE 2009.

Extensive commercial farming areas

• Cattle and game farming in areas of low agricultural potential

• Serviced by a small labour force

• Housing usually on-farm and of uneven quality

• Examples – Cattle and game farms around Northern provinces

Page 35: BACKGROUND TO THE COUNTRIES’ HOUSING POLICY AND HOUSING ACT PRESENTATION TO THE PORTFOLIO COMMITTEE 9 JUNE 2009.

Extensive commercial farming

Page 36: BACKGROUND TO THE COUNTRIES’ HOUSING POLICY AND HOUSING ACT PRESENTATION TO THE PORTFOLIO COMMITTEE 9 JUNE 2009.

Subsistence farming

• Communal land rights

• Mostly women

• Far from markets and poor infrastructure

• Mostly own consumption

• Incomes augmented with remittances from urban areas and government grants

Page 37: BACKGROUND TO THE COUNTRIES’ HOUSING POLICY AND HOUSING ACT PRESENTATION TO THE PORTFOLIO COMMITTEE 9 JUNE 2009.

Subsistence farming

Page 38: BACKGROUND TO THE COUNTRIES’ HOUSING POLICY AND HOUSING ACT PRESENTATION TO THE PORTFOLIO COMMITTEE 9 JUNE 2009.

Policy implications

• Constitutional obligation on State to progressively realise the right to adequate housing within the available means.

• The National Housing Programme responds to the housing needs of all the settlement types and is continuously evolving as the socio-economic environment changes.

Page 39: BACKGROUND TO THE COUNTRIES’ HOUSING POLICY AND HOUSING ACT PRESENTATION TO THE PORTFOLIO COMMITTEE 9 JUNE 2009.

Thank you

Page 40: BACKGROUND TO THE COUNTRIES’ HOUSING POLICY AND HOUSING ACT PRESENTATION TO THE PORTFOLIO COMMITTEE 9 JUNE 2009.

Brief background to the New Housing Policy and Strategy

for South Africa,1994

Page 41: BACKGROUND TO THE COUNTRIES’ HOUSING POLICY AND HOUSING ACT PRESENTATION TO THE PORTFOLIO COMMITTEE 9 JUNE 2009.

Background

• Multi-party and stakeholder negotiations in the National Housing Forum culminated in the Housing White Paper, being approved in December, 1994

• The policy was shaped by the prevailing context of the housing situation and past housing practices and settlement laws.

Page 42: BACKGROUND TO THE COUNTRIES’ HOUSING POLICY AND HOUSING ACT PRESENTATION TO THE PORTFOLIO COMMITTEE 9 JUNE 2009.

Housing challenges1994

• Population estimated at 43,5m• 43% unemployment • 55%of households earned below R1 000,00

pm (poverty line at the time)• Large informal sector not contributing to tax

base• Only 16,9 % of households could house

themselves• 83,1% of households earned R3 500 and less

and needed housing assistance

Page 43: BACKGROUND TO THE COUNTRIES’ HOUSING POLICY AND HOUSING ACT PRESENTATION TO THE PORTFOLIO COMMITTEE 9 JUNE 2009.

Housing backlog:• 1,5 to 3 million households in need of

housing assistance• 200 000 new households per annum• 5 million traditional dwellings• 25% no access to potable water• 48% no sanitation facilities• 46,5% no access to electricity

Housing challenges1994

Page 44: BACKGROUND TO THE COUNTRIES’ HOUSING POLICY AND HOUSING ACT PRESENTATION TO THE PORTFOLIO COMMITTEE 9 JUNE 2009.

The White Paper, 1994

Strategic thrusts:1. Stabilising the housing environment

2. Supporting the housing process

3. Mobilising housing credit

4. Providing housing subsidy assistance

5. Rationalising the institutional framework

6. Facilitate speedy release of serviced land

7. Coordinating public sector investment

Page 45: BACKGROUND TO THE COUNTRIES’ HOUSING POLICY AND HOUSING ACT PRESENTATION TO THE PORTFOLIO COMMITTEE 9 JUNE 2009.

The White Paper, 1994

Key impacts• Introduction and refinement of

housing subsidy scheme and backlog• Rationalising of roles and

responsibilities and legislation• Mobilising housing finance National

Housing Finance Corporation, Mortgage Indemnity Fund,

• Rightsizing Servcon / Thubelisha• People’s Housing Process

Page 46: BACKGROUND TO THE COUNTRIES’ HOUSING POLICY AND HOUSING ACT PRESENTATION TO THE PORTFOLIO COMMITTEE 9 JUNE 2009.

Housing Act, 1996

Page 47: BACKGROUND TO THE COUNTRIES’ HOUSING POLICY AND HOUSING ACT PRESENTATION TO THE PORTFOLIO COMMITTEE 9 JUNE 2009.

Housing Act, 1996

• Defines the housing processDefines the housing process• Sets general principlesSets general principles• Defines roles and responsibilities of Defines roles and responsibilities of

government spheresgovernment spheres• Provides for - National Housing Code, Provides for - National Housing Code,

National Housing Information System, National Housing Information System, National and Provincial Housing National and Provincial Housing Development PlansDevelopment Plans

• Establishes the South African Housing fund Establishes the South African Housing fund and Provincial Housing Fundsand Provincial Housing Funds

Page 48: BACKGROUND TO THE COUNTRIES’ HOUSING POLICY AND HOUSING ACT PRESENTATION TO THE PORTFOLIO COMMITTEE 9 JUNE 2009.

Housing Act, 1996• Rationalises previous housing Rationalises previous housing

legislation legislation

• Provides for the termination of “old” Provides for the termination of “old” business dispensationbusiness dispensation

• Has gone through a number of Has gone through a number of amendments most significantly:amendments most significantly:– Abolishing provincial housing boardsAbolishing provincial housing boards– Pre-emptive rightPre-emptive right– Procurement policyProcurement policy

Page 49: BACKGROUND TO THE COUNTRIES’ HOUSING POLICY AND HOUSING ACT PRESENTATION TO THE PORTFOLIO COMMITTEE 9 JUNE 2009.

Discussion Questions?