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Friday, February 22, 2013

Indian real estate must be given infrastructure status

The Indian real estate should be treated at par with other sectors like electricity, water, roads and highways within the scope of ‘infrastructure’ sector, and this will result in lower interest rates on loans and increased availability of banking and financial institutional funds to both developers and individuals, leading global real estate consultant has said.

In India, power, oil and gas, ports and shipping, roads and bridges, telecommunications, aviation and dams and irrigation canals are considered a part of the infrastructure sector. These have some common salient features that are critical for defining them as part of infrastructural sector. The real estate sector is quite analogous to infrastructure sector as it has similar characteristics and faces similar challenges and risks, according to Cushman & Wakefield.

“The RBI and the Government now must recognize the contribution of the Indian real estate sector to the economy. As an industry it provides substantial employment, capital generation and enables economic activities such as manufacturing, trading, services, etc. Hence, ensuring that the sector is provided with the similar benefits as provided to other infrastructure sectors such as roads, dams, airports, etc. will prove very beneficial to the Indian economy at large.

“The authorities must at least consider the case for such proactive measures to be taken to protect and boost the housing sector where their own assessments show that there is a current shortfall of 18.78 million units in urban India,” Sanjay Dutt, Executive Managing Director - South Asia.

Real estate construction is labour and capital intensive and the real estate and construction business is the second largest employer in the nation after agriculture. Significantly, real estate also forms the basic input for a variety of other sectors such as IT/ITeS, retail and trading, manufacturing, etc. and has a substantial multiplier effect on others sectors of the economy, the agency said, adding, “Therefore, any decline in construction may lead to adverse impacts on the Indian economy such as increased unemployment rates, reduced business investments, reduced off-takes on primary sectors such as mining and steel production, etc.”

The Indian real estate sector at present is facing challenges like increased land cost, delay in approvals, lack of availability of funds both at buyers’ and developers’ levels, under-developed infrastructure and skilled manpower. It has been a pressing demand from all the stakeholders in the real estate sector for the sector to be given the status of ‘infrastructure.’ Whilst it is the RBI’s prerogative to grant this status, it is also up to the Government to recommend and push for this.

Listing other benefits of infrastructure status to real estate sector, the report said, “Though 100% FDI is allowed in the real estate sector, subject to certain norms and there have been some FDI inflows, this move would attract more FDI into the sector as investors would take note of the special status given to the sector, which assures them about the safety of their investments.”

Currently, the real estate sector’s contribution to the GDP is merely 5%; lower than the average contribution of developed countries like France, UK and Australia having modern infrastructure and well developed real estate market. The share of real estate in China is close to 12%. China has taken large strides in infrastructure and real estate in the last few decades, which in turn has propelled high GDP growth rates in the last few years. Following China’s example, developing countries like Indonesia, Argentina and Spain, to name a few, are consciously striving for a higher GDP contribution from real estate.

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