Context:
Urban housing prices in Indian cities have surged sharply, making homeownership increasingly unaffordable for middle- and lower-income groups. A 2BHK flat in cities like Patna costing over ₹1 crore reflects a structural shift where housing is treated primarily as a financial asset rather than a social necessity, intensifying urban inequality and exclusion.
Key Highlights:
• Nature of the Crisis
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Rapid escalation in property prices across Tier-I and Tier-II cities.
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Real estate–led urban development prioritizes capital appreciation over affordability.
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Coexistence of lakhs of vacant houses alongside overcrowded slums.
• Structural Causes
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Urban land acquired cheaply, later sold at inflated post-development prices.
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Increasing financialization of housing and speculative land hoarding.
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Housing supply calibrated to purchasing power, not actual need.
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Limited regulation of Floor Area Ratio (FAR) constraining supply.
• Governance and Policy Concerns
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Criticism of viewing land as a revenue-generating asset (as reflected in certain policy approaches).
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Weak implementation of inclusionary zoning norms.
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Lack of effective taxation on vacant or underutilized properties.
• Social Impact
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Families postpone education and healthcare spending due to housing burden.
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Migrants remain in informal settlements, unregistered and politically voiceless.
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Rising ghettoization and segregation, especially affecting Dalits and Muslims.
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Erosion of urban citizenship and spatial justice.
Relevant Prelims Points:
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Floor Area Ratio (FAR)
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Ratio of total built-up area to plot size.
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Higher FAR increases housing supply density.
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Controlled by local urban development authorities.
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Inclusionary Zoning
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Mandates a fixed proportion of housing in new developments for economically weaker sections (EWS) or lower-income groups.
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Used in countries like the Netherlands and USA.
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Affordable Housing Policies in India
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Pradhan Mantri Awas Yojana (PMAY-Urban) – Housing for All mission.
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Credit-linked subsidy for EWS/LIG/MIG groups.
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Affordable Rental Housing Complexes (ARHC) scheme for migrants.
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Spatial Justice
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Concept emphasizing equitable access to urban services, housing, and opportunities.
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Singapore Housing Model
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Government-led Housing Development Board (HDB) provides large-scale public housing.
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Ensures social integration through quota-based allocation.
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Vacancy and Speculation
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Inverse taxation on unoccupied houses proposed to discourage speculation.
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Relevant Mains Points:
• Housing as a Commodity vs. Social Good
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Shift from welfare-based housing to market-driven real estate model.
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Echoes Friedrich Engels’ critique of commodification of shelter.
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Financialization disconnects housing from its social function.
• Urban Governance and Land Policy Failures
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Monetization of land by development authorities fuels speculation.
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Inadequate regulation of land monopolies.
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Underutilization of planning tools like higher FAR in affordable zones.
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Weak enforcement of land value capture mechanisms.
• Economic Implications (GS III)
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High housing costs reduce household disposable income, impacting consumption.
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Contributes to urban informalization and productivity losses.
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Deepens wealth inequality via asset concentration.
• Social Justice Dimensions (GS I & II)
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Segregation leads to social fragmentation and identity-based clustering.
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Marginalized communities pushed to peripheral areas lacking amenities.
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Violates principles of equity and inclusive growth.
• Limits of Peripheral Expansion
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Transit-based solutions insufficient without schools, healthcare, jobs, and social infrastructure.
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Peripheral housing without amenities exacerbates exclusion.
• Policy Solutions Suggested
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Inclusionary zoning mandates (Dutch model – social housing in every project).
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Taxation on vacant properties to mobilize unused stock.
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Reform in urban land valuation and allocation policies.
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Expansion of affordable rental housing in central locations.
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Integrated land-use and transport planning.
• Way Forward
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Reorient housing policy toward “housing as a right” rather than an investment vehicle.
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Strengthen public housing agencies in urban areas.
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Mandate mixed-income development models.
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Reform FAR norms to increase supply while ensuring sustainability.
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Improve urban local body capacity in land governance and planning transparency.
UPSC Relevance (GS-wise):
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GS I – Indian Society: Urbanization, segregation, housing inequality.
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GS II – Social Justice & Governance: Affordable housing, urban citizenship, inclusive planning.
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GS III – Economy: Real estate sector, financialization, urban development model.
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Prelims: FAR, Inclusionary Zoning, PMAY, ARHC, Spatial Justice concepts.
