• A resident sits on a balcony of an apartment in Mumbai. It costs The rent for an apartment in the same building is around $190 (Dh700) per month. Danish Siddiqui/Reuters
    A resident sits on a balcony of an apartment in Mumbai. It costs The rent for an apartment in the same building is around $190 (Dh700) per month. Danish Siddiqui/Reuters
  • A woman hangs clothes outside the window of an apartment of an old residential building in Mumbai. The rent for a 41 square metre one-room apartment in this building is around $240 (Dh880) per month. Danish Siddiqui/Reuters
    A woman hangs clothes outside the window of an apartment of an old residential building in Mumbai. The rent for a 41 square metre one-room apartment in this building is around $240 (Dh880) per month. Danish Siddiqui/Reuters
  • Windows of residential buildings are pictured in south Mumbai. Danish Siddiqui/Reuters
    Windows of residential buildings are pictured in south Mumbai. Danish Siddiqui/Reuters
  • An old residential building in Mumbai. The cost of buying a 22 square-metre one-bedroom apartment in this building is around $32,000 (Dh117,500). The rent for an apartment here is $160 (Dh 587) per month. Danish Siddiqui/Reuters
    An old residential building in Mumbai. The cost of buying a 22 square-metre one-bedroom apartment in this building is around $32,000 (Dh117,500). The rent for an apartment here is $160 (Dh 587) per month. Danish Siddiqui/Reuters
  • Windows of various apartments of a high-rise residential building are seen in the western suburb of Mumbai. Danish Siddiqui/Reuters
    Windows of various apartments of a high-rise residential building are seen in the western suburb of Mumbai. Danish Siddiqui/Reuters

Mumbai’s housing crunch set to deepen


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MUMBAI // Maharahstra, India’s wealthiest and most urbanised state, needs to add 10 million new homes by 2022 to end a chronic shortage of affordable housing.

More than US$200 billion (Dh735bn) in fresh investment will be needed to solve the housing crunch, a report by consultants KPMG found.

India’s urban population is set to double by 2050. It means finding jobs and inexpensive city homes will become a major challenge for the country’s politicians.

According to the 2011 census, Maharashtra already has India’s highest urban population, most of it concentrated in five cities including Greater Mumbai, which is home to 23 million and one of the most densely populated cities on earth.

Activists have long complained that, despite a surplus of luxury homes lying unsold, Mumbai and other cities have a severe shortage of affordable housing.

The issue has been taken up by nationalist groups, such as right-wing Hindu party Shiv Sena, appealing to Mumbai’s working classes.

“Where are the homes for Mumbaikars?” asked Subhash Desai, Maharashtra’s industries minister and a Shiv Sena leader.

“They are industrial workers, office-goers, drivers, security guards, domestic help. We make them [live] two hours away,” he said at the presentation of KPMG’s findings. The KPMG report, published on Tuesday, found that in urban areas alone, Maharashtra would need 5 million new homes by 2022, adding about 50 per cent to its current housing stock.

Most of that - an estimated 70 per cent - would need to be affordable.

About half of Mumbai’s households earn less than 20,000 rupees (Dh1,160) a month, putting even the average price of government-built affordable homes in the city - just under $24,000 - out of reach.

The report warned the state would need to redevelop its overcrowded cities, as well as build new ones to accommodate an extra 1 million new city-dwellers a year.

“One of the key challenges is how do you create new urban growth centres?” said Arvind Mahajan, partner and head of infrastructure and government services at KPMG in Mumbai.

New cities on the outskirts of Mumbai have been criticised for failing to create jobs, instead adding commuters.

Maharashtra’s urban planning woes hit headlines in India earlier this week, after Mumbai was forced to scrap a development plan criticised for failing to consider heritage buildings, open spaces, slum dwellers and affordable housing.

* Reuters