Policies for development of Slum improvement of city in india
#1

Slum Population and Households in India- 2001 & 2011



                                                            2001     [b]  2011                                      [/b]
Urban Households (Million)                       55.83       80.89
Slum Households (Million)                        10.15       13.92
Slum Households Size                               5.2          4.7
Slum Population(Million)                           52.37       65.49 
% of Slum HHs to urban HHs                    18.2%      17.2%
% of Slum population to urban population  18.3%      17.4%



Slum Upgrading under Pradhan Mantri Awas Yojana (PMAY) housing for all (HFA)

·         Launched on 25th June 2015 by Hon’ble Prime Minister of India
·         Aims to provide ‘Housing for All’ by 2022 – 20 million units
·         Coverage - All 4041 statutory towns in 3 phases
·         Beneficiaries - EWS and LIG categories
o   EWS: family with income upto Rs. 3 lakh;
o   LIG: family with income from Rs. 3-6 lakh;

PMAY MISSION  FOUR COMPONENT 


[b]1. IN SITU SLUM REDEVELOPMENT[/b]


 - Using land as a resource

 - With private participation 
- Extra FSI/TDR/FAR if required to make projects financially viable 


2. Affordable Housing through Credit Linked Subsidy 
- Interest subvention subsidy for EWS and LIG for new house or incremental housing 
- EWS: Annual Household Income Up to Rs.3 lakh and house sizes upto 30 sq.m 
- LIG: Annual Household Income Between Rs.3-6 lakhs and house sizes upto 60 sq.m 


3. Affordable Housing in Partnership 
- with private sector or public sector including Parastatal agencies
 - Central Assistance per EWS house in affordable housing projects where 35% of constructed houses are for EWS category 


4. Subsidy for beneficiary-led individual house construction 
- For individuals of EWS category requiring individual house 
- State to prepare a separate project for such beneficiaries - No isolated/ splintered beneficiary to be covered.





1. IN SITU SLUM REDEVELOPMENT

·         Using land as a resource with private participation


·         Slums on Central Government land/State Government land/ULB land


  o   Slum rehabilitation grant of Rs. 1 lakh per house, on an average.


  o   Flexibility to States/Cities to deploy this central grant for other slums being redeveloped


  o   States/Cities provide additional FSI/FAR or TDR to make projects financially viable


  o   Land cost not to be charged by Central Govt. agencies


·         Slums on Private Owned Land


  o   States/Cities provide additional FSI/FAR or TDR to land owner as per its policy; No Central Assistance


·         State/UTs shall decide: Eligibility criteria; Beneficiary contribution; allotment basis; etc.


  o   Identify all tenable slums and their parameters; Examine financial and technical viability


·         Two Components: slum rehabilitation component; free sale component: available to developers for selling in the market so as to cross subsidize the project


·         Private partner to be selected through open bidding process




At the slum decadal growth rate of 34%, the slum households are projected to go upto 18 million. 2 million non-slum urban poor households are proposed to be covered under the Mission. Hence, total housing shortage envisaged to be addressed through the new mission is 20 million.


Credit linked subsidy component is being implemented as a Central Sector Scheme while other three components as Centrally Sponsored Scheme (CSS).
All statutory towns as per Census 2011 and towns notified subsequently would be eligible for coverage under the Mission



[b]Slum upgrading as part of MDG Goal 7 on Ensuring Environmental Sustainability
[/b]


Target 7D : by 2020, to have achieved a significant improvement in the lives of at least 100 million slum dwellers 

“The target of improving the lives of at least 100 million slum dwellers has already been achieved twice-over…. more than 200 million slum dwellers have gained access to improved water, sanitation or durable and less crowded housing..” 

As per Census of India, in 2011, 65.5 mn people, i.e. 17.4 % of urban population lived in slums, reduced from 18.3% in 2001 
“India has been successful in improving the lives of slum dwellers, having helped 59.7 million out of dire conditions since the year 2000…”, State of the World’s Cities 2010/2011: Bridging the Urban Divide, UN-HABITAT

Manish Jain Luhadia 
B.Arch (hons.), M.Plan
Email: manish@frontdesk.co.in
Tel: +91 141 6693948
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PMAY MISSION COMPONENT 
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