FG calls African governments to make land reform friendly for housing delivery

Federal Government Of Nigeria (FGN)

 

 

The Federal Government of Nigeria has urged the African governments as a matter of priority to make land administration reforms friendly aimed at making land a primary tool for delivering affordable housing to low-income earners and informal workers across Nigeria and in the continent.

 

In addition,the Nigerian government stated that the reform initiative on land administration currently being undertaken by the Ministry would form the productive backbone of our economies, yet they are least served by conventional housing finance and formal land processes.

 

Speaking at the on-going 20th Africa International Housing Show in Abuja, the Minister of Housing and Urban Development, Muttaqha Rabe Darma, hinted that across African continent, steady rapid urbanisation is outpacing the housing supply in all countries.

 

The Minister, represented by Director Public Building and Housing Development, Pemi Temitope, submitted on the paper titled “Land as a Tool for Affordable Housing for Low-Income Earners and Informal Workers in Africa,” that no affordable housing policy can succeed without an efficient, transparent, and secure land administration system.

 

“This has created the growing deficits and expanding informal settlements that disproportionately affect artisans, traders, transport operators, farmers, market women, young entrepreneurs and other small-scale business owners,” he stated ”

 

According to Darma,they form the productive backbone of our economies and some of the key reforms of the Ministry under the Renewed Hope Agenda to include the Nigerian Land Titling, Registration and Documentation Programme (NLTRDP).

 

“The programme aimed at expanding land registration and improving tenure security, modernising land administration systems and reducing transaction costs. It also targets at unlocking the economic value of land assets and improving access to housing finance.”

 

He noted that implementation will be done in close collaboration with State Governments, in recognition of their constitutional responsibility under the Land Use Act as the Federal Government’s role will focus on policy coordination, technical support, common standards, and digital frameworks.

 

“The Ministry is also advancing digital transformation through Geographic Information Systems, digital cadastral mapping, electronic land records, and a Centralised Lands Repository Management System to cut processing time and build public trust” he added

 

Darma called for housing models that reflect the realities of low-income households, including cooperative housing schemes, site-and-services programmes, incremental housing development, rent-to-own initiatives, and finance products designed for irregular income patterns.

 

He urged the governments to place land administration reform at the center of their housing strategies, describing secure land rights and digital land management as “powerful tools for poverty reduction, wealth creation, and inclusive national development.”

 

” Our vision is an Africa where every family has the opportunity to own or access decent housing; where women, youth and vulnerable groups enjoy equitable access to land; and where housing serves as a catalyst for economic growth and social stability,” he remarked

 

The Minister assured that the Ministry will continue to work with State Governments, development partners, the private sector, and stakeholders to transform Nigeria’s housing landscape and contribute to Africa’s sustainable urban development agenda.

 

Earlier, the Permanent Secretary of the Ministry, Shuaib Belgore, represented by the Director Urban and Regional Development, Margaret Adejobi said that the Ministry is committed to making land a central tool for delivering affordable housing to low-income earners and informal workers in Africa.

 

He stated that, accessible, secure, and well-documented land remains the foundation for solving Africa’s housing deficit and driving inclusive economic growth, saying ,millions of Africans, especially those in the informal sector such as artisans, traders, farmers, and transport operators, continue to face barriers in accessing decent and affordable housing.

 

“Part of key challenges identified include difficult access to land, lengthy title registration processes, high transaction costs, multiple ownership claims, and weak land documentation. These constraints force many citizens into informal settlements and exclude them from formal housing and financial systems” he stated

 

To address this, Belgore said that the Ministry is advancing key reforms under the NLTRDP to address those challenges, adding that the Ministry is also pursuing digital solutions to make land services more transparent, efficient, and accessible to ordinary citizens.

 

He emphasized that governments alone cannot close Africa’s housing gap and called for stronger collaboration among federal and state governments, development partners, financial institutions, private developers, professional bodies, and community organizations.

 

He,however, argued that innovative partnerships are critical to creating housing systems that respond to the realities of low-income earners rather than being designed only around formal employment structures.

 

The Perm. Secretary expressed optimism that deliberations at the AIHS would produce practical recommendations to transform housing delivery across the continent, and if Africa is to achieve sustainable housing for all, land administration must shift from being a barrier to becoming an instrument of inclusion, wealth creation, and poverty reduction.

 

He assured that they will remain committed to reforms that will strengthen land governance and expand access to affordable housing for millions of Nigerians and Africans.

 

The 20th Africa International Housing Show remains Africa’s foremost platform for dialogue, partnership, and investment in the housing sector.

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