Housing Microfinance and Housing Financialisation in a Global Perspective
journal contribution
posted on 2024-10-04, 13:38authored byMonika Grubbauer, Philip Mader
The application of microfinance to the provision, improvement or adaptation
of housing—‘housing microfinance’—is an increasingly significant area of
practice and research interest. Housing microfinance has proliferated, predominantly but not exclusively in the global South. Its proliferation must be
understood in the context of financialisation and the concurrently growing
importance of financial self-help and private real estate investment. Promoter
perspectives emphasise the affordability of microfinance solutions for housing, their appropriateness for incremental housing strategies, and potentially
interesting new business models. Critical perspectives emphasise the high
costs and continual need for subsidies, risks faced by borrowers and the discipline demanded from them. To advance the debate, we present an analytical typology which maps different housing microfinance approaches in terms
of how they connect finance with housing, whether they are credit-led or
savings-led, whether the market or the state dominates, whether they are
individualistic or community-oriented, and how formal or informal they are.
The five articles in this special issue, presenting material from Kenya, Mexico,
U.S.A, Thailand and Argentina, collectively advance six avenues of research on
housing microfinance: (1) its immediate social impacts; (2) wider impacts in
terms of housing affordability, markets and policies; (3) implications for construction and retailing markets; (4) consequences for urban development and
societies, (5) the financial work required from participants; (6) and the significance of the ongoing experimentation in housing microfinance.
Funding
Default funder
History
Publisher
Routledge
Citation
Monika Grubbauer & Philip Mader (2021) 'Housing Housing Microfinance and Housing Financialisation in a Global Perspective', International Journal of Housing Policy, 21:4, 465-483, DOI: 10.1080/19491247.2021.1922165