Thursday, February 26, 2026
34.2 C
Lagos

The Business Case for Housing Microfinance in Sub-Saharan Africa

A new study from Habitat for Humanity says that housing microfinance can and should become a mainstream offering for financial institutions in Sub-Saharan Africa as they respond to growing housing needs in the region, particularly from poor people.

The business case study, released yesterday, was entitled “Building the Business Case for Housing Microfinance in Sub-Saharan Africa”. It builds on a project carried out over six years in Kenya and Uganda called “Building Assets Unlocking Access”. The project was a partnership between Habitat’s Terwilliger Center for Innovation in Shelter and the Mastercard Foundation. So far, the project has reached over 47,000 households and mobilized more than US$43 million in capital to benefit over 237,000 individuals.

The business case study argues that housing microfinance, small non-mortgage backed loans for short terms, can become a mainstream offering in the market to address growing housing needs in the region, incremental building patterns, and the land tenure realities of low-income households.

There are an estimated 1.6 billion people in the world living in substandard housing. This figure is climbing, especially as the world becomes more urbanized and people migrate to cities for economic opportunity. In Sub-Saharan Africa, however, as much as 99 percent of people do not have access to formal financing –  credit, savings, mortgages – that can let them start building or improving their homes.

Traditionally, they build homes gradually as their resources allow. Developer-built, bank-financed homes are rare in Africa, serving fewer than five percent of households in most countries.
“Solving the housing challenges in Africa will require a massive amount of capital investment and most of that will need to come from the private sector,” said Patrick Kelley, Vice President of Habitat’s Terwilliger Center for Innovation in Shelter. “Financial institutions of all kinds have a role to play, especially those already deeply embedded in communities and who understand people with informal sector livelihoods.”
Habitat’s Terwilliger Center for Innovation in Shelter partnership with the Mastercard Foundation sought to motivate local financial service providers in Kenya and Uganda to develop housing microfinance loans to fund the incremental building process common among low-income households. The results have proven that there is demand for housing microfinance among families or individuals earning as little as US$5 a day who are seeking to build, extend, or renovate their home.
“At the Mastercard Foundation, our focus is on helping economically disadvantaged people, especially young people in Africa, to find opportunities to move themselves, their families and their communities out of poverty,” said Ruth Dueck-Mbeba, Senior Program Manager at the Foundation.

“This project has provided access to appropriate finance for decent housing. We believe that decent housing can provide more than four walls and a roof over one’s head. It offers people hope, dignity, and a place in their communities.  This report should help financial service providers to scale these products, which would benefit their enterprises as well as the lives of many poor people in Africa.”
Financial institutions in the region that have ventured into housing microfi­nance have often reported it to be a popular product with their clients. To understand the demand side factors, the value proposition of these products, the competitive advantage of financial service providers offering it, and the differentiated features that make housing microfinance a strategic product, the business case study surveyed the work of two financial institutions: Kenya Women Microfinance Bank, or KWFT, and Centenary Bank in Uganda.
The study argues, through the lenses of these two institutions in different geographies, that success and profitability of a housing microfinance product relies on a number of factors: connection with the financial service provider’s mission, good marketing, a clear pricing structure, understanding of land tenure realities, an opportunity to attract new clients, and secure long-term capital to fund the expansion of such portfolios.
“Financing incremental housing solutions is a natural step in the progress of greater financial inclusion. Centenary and KWFT are providing a great example of how financial institutions will benefit from understanding their clients and developing products that serve them well,” said Patrick Kelley.

spot_img
spot_img
spot_img

Hot this week

TeamApt Partners Awabah, PenCom to Power Micro-Pension for Nigeria’s Informal Economy

L-R: Dennis Ajalie, Chief Executive Officer, TeamApt Limited (a...

ITU Report: 6bn People Connected Online, 2.2bn Offline Globally

The world's online population grew by more than 240...

NGX RegCo Issues Advisory on Recent Price Movements, Urges Informed Trading

NGX Regulation Limited (NGX RegCo), the independent regulatory arm...

Union Bank: Cardoso’s Remarks at MPC Meeting Aligns with Our Recapitalisation Journey

Union Bank of Nigeria has issued a statement reaffirming...

AIICO 2026 Agency Retreat Honours Outstanding Sales Champions

Mrs. Ego Uzochukwu (Award Winner, centre); flanked on her...

Topics

The $200 Billion Quest for Reliable Electricity in Nigeria

By Elvis Eromosele Nigeria is an energy starved nation. Imagine...

Issues from Buhari’s Last Independence Day Broadcast

By Haniel Ukpaukure I sat through the agony of watching...

Yuletide: Ecobank Reassures Customers of 24-Hour Digital Banking Services

Ahead of the Yuletide holidays, Ecobank Nigeria has reassured...

MTN Nigeria Cancels Plan to Go Public

MTN Nigeria has cancelled its earlier plan to go...

Unity Bank, Kitian Training Hub Partner to Empower Over 300 Youths with Digital Skills

From left: Mr Adekunle Rafiu, General Manager, Kitian Training...

Oil Prices Driving Lower Growth in Sub-Saharan Africa

Latest report by the World Bank Group suggests that low oil prices have considerably reduced growth in commodity-exporting countries in Sub-Saharan Africa, especially in Nigeria and Angola etc. and have also slowed activity in non-oil sectors. The report says that although South Africa is expected to be one of the main beneficiaries of low oil prices, growth is being held back by energy shortages, weak investor confidence amid policy uncertainty, and by the anticipated gradual tightening of monetary and fiscal policy. Growth in the region is forecast to slow to 4.2 percent, slower than previously expected.

CBN Disowns Operating Licence of ZULDAL Microfinance Bank

The attention of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN)...

Guinea Insurance Reports N1bn Premium Income

During the company’s 2015/58th Annual General Meeting held recently...
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

spot_imgspot_img