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    | Article of the Month - 
	  October 2008 |  Improving Slum Conditions through Innovative Financing Dr. Anna TIBAIJUKA, Under Secretary General and 
		Executive Director UN-HABITAT
			
				
					
					 
		 
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		1) This paper has been presented as 
		the keynote address at the Opening Ceremony of the FIG Working Week 2008 
		in Stockholm, Sweden 15 June 2008. Key words: UN-HABITAT, GLTN, housing financing  Your Excellency Mr. Andreas Carlgren, Swedish Minister for the 
		Environment,Mr. Stig Enemark, President of the International Federation of 
		Surveyors,
 Mr. Svante Astermo, President of the Swedish Association of Chartered 
		Surveyors and Chair of the Organising Committee
 Distinguished guests,
 Students, ladies and gentlemen,
 I am very pleased to be here with you today. UN-HABITAT and FIG have 
		a shared history that goes back to over two decades of fruitful 
		collaboration. In this regard, I would also like to congratulate the 
		Swedish FIG on its 100th Anniversary.  I am also pleased to be in Stockholm. UN-HABITAT and the City of 
		Stockholm also have a shared history that goes back to 1972 when the 
		concept of sustainable development was born. The process that led to 
		formalising that concept would eventually lead to the creation of 
		UN-HABITAT four years later in the City of Vancouver, in Canada.  Ladies and gentlemen,  It is a developing country perspective that I would like to bring to 
		the theme of this year’s Working Week, “Integrating Generations.”  The theme highlights the need to attract a new generation of 
		surveyors. The theme also refers to the need for new capacities to 
		address new priorities. These are important themes for today’s world.
		 I would like to present two critical issues that we see – from the 
		perspective of the U.N. and UN-HABITAT in particular – as shaping the 
		global debate on sustainable development. These two issues are 
		urbanisation and climate change and, as you will see, they are closely 
		inter-linked.  I would also like to take advantage of this opportunity to reflect on 
		the role that surveyors and land specialists can play in addressing 
		these challenges.  Let’s begin with the Challenge of Unsustainable Urbanisation.
		 Distinguished guests,  It is no secret: the world is becoming more urban. It’s also no 
		secret that this process of urbanisation cannot be reversed; sending 
		people back to their villages simply does not work; it never did and it 
		never will.  People move to cities because they expect a better life. It is this 
		expectation that motivates people. Often, however, the expectation is 
		illusory. Cities are not prepared to welcome and receive the new influx.
		 The challenge, therefore, is to try to guide this urbanisation 
		process. Unfortunately, 95 percent of this urban expansion is taking 
		place in those cities least equipped to negotiate the urban transition – 
		the secondary cities of Africa and Asia.  As a result we are witnessing the urbanisation of poverty. Today 
		there is an estimated 1 billion slum dwellers. By 2030, this figure may 
		double to 2 billion people.  UN-HABITAT’s 2006/2007 State of the World’s Cities report confirmed 
		what we have suspected for a long time: that slum dwellers are more 
		likely to die early, suffer from malnutrition and disease, be less 
		educated and have fewer employment opportunities than any other segment 
		of the population.  In essence, the report revealed that we have been confusing proximity 
		to services with access to those services. Living in cities does not 
		immediately translate into a better life, I’m afraid to say.  So how is the international community responding?  A costing exercise was carried out in 2005 to determine the scale of 
		resources required to meet the full needs of the projected slum growth – 
		not simply the relatively modest Millennium Development Goal target of 
		“improving the lives of 100 million slum dwellers”  Our estimates showed that some US$300 billion would be required over 
		a 15 year period or roughly 25 billion US dollars per year.  While such costing exercises are nothing new and are commonly carried 
		out for many development agendas from health to nutrition, the 
		uniqueness of this exercise lies in the recognition that the urban poor 
		themselves – when properly enabled and empowered – can and are willing 
		to mobilize about 80 per cent of the required resources.  Ladies and gentlemen,  My submission is that the urban poor can take care of themselves, up 
		to a point. The urban poor are potentially capable of contributing 20 
		billion dollars per year to improve their own living conditions. This 
		would leave roughly 5 billion US dollars per year to be mobilized from 
		other sources.  We know, however, that aid-based approaches are not enough. 
		Currently, the total international assistance for urban development is 
		estimated at some US$ 2 billion per year.  Clearly, we need to think outside the box. We need to think in terms 
		of changing the rules of the game that prevent the majority of the urban 
		population in developing countries from leveraging 20 billion of their 
		own investment with 5 billion from other sources.  How can we begin to think out of the box is the reason why FIG and 
		UN-HABITAT are organizing a special two-day seminar as part of this 
		year’s Working Week. The seminar’s title is “Improving Slum Conditions 
		through Innovative Financing” and it takes place today and tomorrow.  Ladies and Gentlemen,  Let me outline some of the challenges confronting slum dwellers 
		trying to access land and formal credit arrangements.  I’ll start from the land perspective. Here are some examples of the 
		systemic barriers faced by the poor: 
			Only some 10 percent of land parcels in the world are 
			registered; in many areas, the poor’s land rights are based on 
			customary rights that are not legally recognized, but are socially 
			legitimate;Only some 5 percent of registered land, is registered in a 
			woman’s name;Individual freehold titling is not always appropriate due to the 
			costs of adjudication, high technical standards, expensive 
			registration and transfer fees, and literacy requirements, and so 
			on; The poor cannot make land markets work for themselves; they are 
			not empowered to capture land values to pay for their housing and 
			infrastructure costs;Dysfunctional land markets can also undermine slum upgrading 
			projects; the short supply of secure, well-located land can lead to 
			the displacement of the intended beneficiaries;Planning regulations, zoning bye-laws and building codes are 
			inappropriate, unaffordable and, consequently, work against the 
			poor;  Distinguished Delegates,  There are signs of hope and innovation. Here are some examples: 
			In Namibia, a flexible system of land tenure will enable people 
			to obtain a ‘starter title’ to provide security of tenure and which 
			can be upgraded over time; Group or cooperative land ownership dramatically limits the 
			number of registration units and thereby reduce registration costs 
			and preserves communities;In the Philippines, the Community Mortgage Programme enables 
			community organizations to identify suitable land for housing on the 
			private market, develop a project proposal and gain access to credit 
			for the development;Land readjustment can be used to create partnerships between the 
			private sector and the urban poor to capture land values and share 
			the ‘profits’ between the rich and the poor;The development of new land tools, such as the Land 
			Administration Domain Model, will allow for the registration of 
			customary forms of tenure and overlapping land rights and claims;In Brazil, the City Statute gives cities new planning tools to 
			promote more inclusive cities;  Some of these messages have been picked up by the Commission for the 
		Legal Empowerment of the Poor. The Commission’s report, launched this 
		month, is a rallying call for systemic reforms to empower the poor. I 
		would encourage you all to read the report. Legal empowerment of the 
		poor is intricately linked to the work of surveyors in facilitating 
		access to land for the poor.  Ladies and Gentlemen, allow me to turn to the issue of 
		access to finance.  As in the world of land, slum dwellers are often systematically 
		excluded from the so-called ‘formal’ system. In this case access to 
		formal sources of credit.  Banks are constrained by the very systems of credit risk analysis 
		they use: financial, legal and technical.  Their financial analysis is biased towards people with bank accounts, 
		formal sector jobs and a proven credit history. In their legal analysis, 
		financial institutions look for legally recognized evidence of ownership 
		and the possibility of repossessing the asset through the courts in case 
		of default. And, from their technical analysis, banks will look for 
		proof of a building permit and conformance to zoning regulations.  From all three risk analysis perspectives, the poor fail the test of 
		the formal credit institutions and markets.  Micro-finance institutions do better for the poor. They will provide 
		small loans. They will not demand land as collateral. However, the loans 
		they give are not housing loans. They are housing loans disguised as 
		consumption or as business loans. This may be a stop-gap measure, but it 
		struggles to meet the full demand for housing loans. There is no 
		evidence that demonstrates that micro-finance has worked for housing 
		micro-finance or for providing infrastructure to the poor.  Ladies and gentlemen, there are signs of hope also in 
		the world of housing finance.  One model, in particular, involves shifting from individual-based 
		solutions to group or cooperative solutions.  Savings schemes are established amongst groups of slums dwellers – 
		mainly by women – who wish to improve their living conditions through a 
		specific project. They establish themselves as a legal entity, which 
		enables them to consider taking a loan. The size of the loan will be 
		determined by their ability to repay. This becomes the basis for 
		designing a bankable project.  Financial institutions become interested because the loan size is 
		large and the transaction costs are low.  From this model, and others that are out there, it is clear that the 
		poor can provide their own housing solutions. But it means that the 
		other pieces of the slum upgrading puzzle must also be place.  This means legal and regulatory pieces. This means participating in 
		land markets. This means getting the planning right. This means 
		reforming land-based tax to create municipal revenue. It also means more 
		participatory municipal budgeting. This means sustainable infrastructure 
		and service delivery.  Ladies and Gentlemen, we have to create more 
		sustainable cities.  This brings me to the second major challenge I would like to touch 
		upon today: Climate Change.  I am pleased that we have Minister Carlgren with us today. I know 
		this is an issue very close to his heart, as it is to my own.  It is no coincidence that climate change and urbanization have become 
		critical development issues at precisely the same time. Indeed, the two 
		issues are virtually inseparable.  This is because how we plan, manage, operate and consume energy in 
		our cities is the key driver behind the phenomenon of global warming:
		 
			75% of global energy consumption occurs in cities. 80% of all waste including greenhouse gas emissions come from 
			cities.  Roughly half of greenhouse gas emissions come from burning fossil 
		fuels in cities for urban transport; while the other half comes from 
		energy-use in buildings as well as for home appliances.  But if cities are part of the problem, they must also be part of the 
		solution.  Recent studies have shown that New York City, which has a very high 
		GDP per capita, has one of the lowest rates of per capita Green House 
		Gas emissions in the United States. This is in large part due to the 
		fact that compact cities are much more energy efficient, a major 
		contributing factor to enhanced productivity.  Ladies and gentlemen,  Rapid urbanisation and climate change are global challenges that 
		require local solutions. For this reason local authorities will have to 
		play a critical role in responding to these challenges.  In this regard, I am pleased to report that, after ten years of work, 
		The Governing Council of UN-Habitat recently adopted a set of 
		Guidelines on Decentralization and Strengthening of Local Authorities. 
		This represents a major step forward in strengthening the role and 
		contribution of local authorities in meeting global challenges.  Distinguished delegates,  How can surveyors and land professionals contribute to more 
		sustainable urbanization?  I would like to highlight six critical areas where you can, and 
		should, make a difference; and where UN-HABITAT and FIG are already 
		working together:  
			Better information for better decision-making and planning. 
			For the preparation of the 2008-09 State of the World’s Cities 
			report, we conducted in-depth surveys with more than 100 
			municipalities. We asked them to tell us the percentage of their 
			city that is informal. 80 percent of the cities came back to us and 
			told us that they did not have to tools or the capacity to answer 
			that question. There is a clear role for the surveying profession to 
			develop low-cost tools and methods to enable developing countries 
			cities to improve the evidence-basis for decision-making. On this 
			note, I am pleased to announce that we have just concluded a 
			two-year agreement with Google to collaborate on new mapping tools 
			using modern technologies. 
Disaster risk reduction. New land-use planning tools are 
			required to enable cities to both mitigate the risks associated with 
			climate change and to adapt to the new realities. Surveyors have a 
			critical role to play here. 
New land tools for poor countries. Most land 
			administration systems are not designed to deal with issues such as 
			customary forms of tenure, or overlapping land rights and claims, or 
			limited institutional capacity. As a result, most systems are 
			unaffordable, inaccessible and inappropriate for developing 
			countries. We need to work together to develop new systems. I am 
			pleased that FIG has taken up this challenge. 
Valuation and tax to strengthen local authority capacity. 
			Land-based tax is one of the principle revenue streams for local 
			authorities, yet most valuation systems are out of date or 
			non-operational. We need new systems to enable local authorities to 
			collect land revenue equitably and to manage it accountably. 
Developing a new Generation of Barefoot Surveyors and 
			Promoting Volunteerism in the Surveying Profession. There is an 
			urgent need to strengthen the capacity of land professionals in the 
			south. This means, on the one hand, simplified curricula, techniques 
			and tools for a cadre of barefoot surveyors; on the other hand, we 
			need to instill a spirit of volunteerism and a sense of mission in 
			the next generation of surveyors. 
Lastly, and perhaps most critically, land professionals need to 
			become more aware of their role, and their responsibility, to 
			promote good land governance. As land and natural resource 
			scarcity increases, the pressures from competing interests will 
			increase. Climate change will further complicate this equation. 
			Surveyors need to play a more assertive role in promoting good land 
			governance.  In this regard, I would like to highlight the important role being 
		played by the GLTN, and its partners in promoting innovative solutions 
		to realize secure land rights for all. FIG and UN-HABITAT have worked 
		closely together under the GLTN umbrella to make this seminar a reality
		 Honorable Minister, ladies and gentlemen, it was in Stockholm that 
		the sustainable development agenda was born.  I hope that it will be in Stockholm again, this week, that we 
		establish, together, a new agenda for sustainable urbanisation and 
		climate change.  I thank you for your kind attention. 
		BIOGRAPHICAL NOTES Dr. Anna Kajumulo Tibaijuka (D.Sc., Agro-Economics)UN Under-Secretary-General and Executive Director, UN-HABITAT
 Director-General, United Nations Office at Nairobi (UNON)
 Anna Tibaijuka is the first African woman elected by the UN 
		General Assembly as Under-Secretary-General of a United Nations 
		programme. She is currently serving a second, four-year term as 
		Under-Secretary-General and Executive Director of UN-HABITAT. A 
		Tanzanian national born to smallholder banana-coffee farmers in Muleba, 
		Tanzania, she was educated at the Swedish University of Agricultural 
		Science in Uppsala. In October 2006, she was appointed Director-General 
		of the United Nations Offices in Nairobi (UNON), the only UN 
		headquarters in Africa and the developing world. She has served as a 
		Member of the Commission for Africa established by British Prime 
		Minister Tony Blair which resulted in the cancellation of multilateral 
		debt for several African countries by the G8 Summit in 2005 at Glen 
		Eagles, Scotland. In July 2005 the Secretary General appointed Mrs. 
		Tibaijuka as his Special Envoy on Human Settlements Issues in Zimbabwe 
		following massive evictions of the poor in urban areas. She is currently 
		a member of the World Health Organization Commission on the Social 
		Determinants of Health, and is also a member of the Advisory Board of 
		the Commission on the Legal Empowerment of the Poor, co-chaired by the 
		former US Secretary of State, Ms. Madeleine Albright, and the Chilean 
		economist Hernando de Soto. Since 2002, Mrs. Tibaijuka has been instrumental in promoting water, 
		sanitation and slum upgrading globally and in assisting the African 
		Union to establish the African Ministerial Conference on Housing and 
		Urban Development (AMCHUD). She also helped place urban poverty high on 
		the agenda of similar regional bodies for Latin American and the 
		Caribbean, as well as the Asia-Pacific. In its unanimous decision to 
		re-elect Mrs. Tibaijuka for a second term as Executive Director of 
		UN-HABITAT, the General Assembly noted her success in forging strategic 
		partnerships with financial institutions for follow-up investment in 
		housing and urban infrastructure. These include the UN-HABITAT $570 
		million agreement with the African Development Bank and $500 million 
		agreement with the Asian Development Bank.  Mrs. Tibaijuka joined the United Nations Conference on Trade and 
		Development, UNCTAD, in Geneva, in 1998 as Director and Special 
		Coordinator for the Least Developed, Land-locked and Island Developing 
		Countries. She was in charge of capacity building in their trade 
		negotiations in the World Trade Organization, and assisted LDCs, for the 
		first time ever, to forge a coherent and united negotiating position for 
		their special trade interests. In July 2000 she was appointed by 
		Secretary General, Kofi Annan as Assistant-Secretary-General and 
		Executive Director of the former United Nations Centre for Human 
		Settlements (UNCHS), the UN agency for the built-up environment and 
		urban development headquartered in Nairobi, Kenya. She is credited with 
		raising awareness about the global challenge of chaotic urbanization, 
		inspiring a new strategic vision, and significantly enhancing the 
		organization’s performance, management and image. These efforts restored 
		donor confidence and the overall credibility of the organization, 
		resulting in its upgrading into a full-fledged United Nations Programme 
		on Human Settlements (UN-HABITAT) by the General Assembly in December, 
		2001. She was in turn elected in December 2002 by the General Assembly 
		as the first Executive Director of the new UN-HABITAT programme at the 
		level of Under Secretary General. Prior to joining the UN, Mrs. Tibaijuka pursued an active academic 
		career as a Professor of Economics at the University of Dar es Salaam, 
		Tanzania. She is the author of various books and research papers on 
		agriculture and rural development, farming systems, food policy, 
		agricultural marketing and trade, sustainable development, social 
		services delivery, gender and land issues, and environmental economics. 
		She was an active member of the civil society and the women’s movement. 
		In 1994 she founded the Tanzanian National Women’s Council, BAWATA, an 
		independent non-party affiliated organization fighting for women’s 
		economic and social rights. In 1996 she founded Barbro Johansson Girls’ 
		Education Trust (Joha Trust) that advocates for quality girls’ education 
		in Tanzania and Africa and operates a model secondary school for poor 
		girls, mostly orphans. She is patron of Tanzania Young Entrepreneurs 
		Initiative. She is a member of various professional associations and is 
		a veteran of UN world summits, including the Beijing Women’s Conference, 
		the Copenhagen Social Summit, Habitat II at Istanbul, and the Food 
		Summit in Rome. She is winner of several awards including honorary 
		Doctorate degrees conferred by the University of McGill in Canada, 
		University College London, and Herriot Watt in Scotland. She is a 
		Foreign Member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Agriculture and Forestry 
		and the International Center for Tropical Agriculture. She is a widow 
		with 5 children, one of whom is adopted.  CONTACTS Dr. Anna K. TibaijukaUN-HABITAT
 P. O. BOX 30030
 Nairobi
 KENYA
 Web site: www.un-habitat.org
 
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