Source: UN Photo/Kibae Park, City View of Dhaka, 2010
The housing finance market in
Bangladesh is poorly developed, characterized by a weak structure (few
second-tier lenders), poor transparency, and little competition to encourage
efficiency.3 In addition, the ineffective governmental frameworks
(legal, regulatory, taxation) in Bangladesh hold back development of the
primary and secondary housing finance markets. The lack of infrastructure in
Bangladesh also makes housing expansion into rural areas difficult.3
Bangladesh’s ratio of housing finance to GDP is less than 3 percent - in
comparison, developed countries have a ratio of 50-70 percent.
Formal mortgage finance is available
only to high-income urban households due to the high interest rates (annual
average rate of 14.5 percent for a 10-15 year loan of $24,000 USD), which has
created a surplus in upper-level housing and a shortage of affordable housing
for the majority of Bangladesh’s population in spite of high demand for housing
finance.3 . Typical LTVs range from 50-70 percent of the home’s
value. Government-subsidized housing finance, provided by the Bangladesh House
Building Finance Corporation (BHBFC), is available (at lower than market rates
of around 12 percent for Dhaka and Chittagong, 10 percent elsewhere, 2008) with
longer maturities of 15-20 years. However, the BHBFC does not adequately target
the lower-income groups that require the most aid and is not an effective
instrument, as demonstrated by its loan recovery rate of less than 50% (2010).3
The national commercial banks also
act as major players in the mortgage finance market in Bangladesh but only have
3-6 percent of their outstanding portfolio into mortgage loans due to the
higher profitability of other instruments (like short term corporate loans).3
Private mortgage finance institutions like the Delta Brac Housing Finance
Corporation have efficient and effective loan strategies and make up over 35%
of the total housing finance market but only serve higher-income clientele.3
Grameen Bank, a microfinance
institution, was originally founded in Bangladesh with the aim of being loan
program for the rural poor to generate a sustainable income. In 1984, Grameen
Bank expanded its operations to include housing loans, and its current
portfolio (2009) is worth $3.3 million USD with 89% repayment rates.3
It has financed 674,435 homes so far, with an average loan size of $277 targeting
the lowest-income households in Bangladesh.3 However, as of June
2008, Grameen Bank and other microcredit lenders only account for .14% of the
outstanding housing loans in Bangladesh.3
1The World Bank. http://data.worldbank.org/country/bangladesh.
Accessed June 20, 2012.
2
International Monetary Fund. http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/weo/2012/01/weodata/index.aspx
Accessed June 20, 2012
3
Nenova, Tatiana. “Expanding Housing Finance to the Underserved in South Asia:
Market Review and Forward Agenda.” 2010.
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