No menu items!

COSTA RICA'S LEADING ENGLISH LANGUAGE NEWSPAPER

HomeArchiveHabitat for Humanity launches housing micro-credit in Costa Rica

Habitat for Humanity launches housing micro-credit in Costa Rica

There is plenty of housing in Costa Rica but little for those who need it. 

“The State of Housing and Urban Development in Costa Rica 2012,” released Wednesday, observed that a glut of expensive housing developments has out-priced many middle class and poor Costa Ricans as developers emphasized “walled city” style developments with private security and other amenities like swimming pools.

The asymmetry between supply and demand in the housing sector is one reason that Habitat for Humanity International and Plycem, a Mexican building materials company, are partnering with local banks to start a microfinance pilot program here to help the many poor Costa Ricans add on to or build their own homes.

“The supply available does not meet the actual demand,” said Foundation for the Promotion of Housing (FUPROVI) Director Eloisa Ulibarri during the report’s presentation Wednesday. 

Despite the abundance of high-priced housing, Costa Rica currently faces a qualitative housing “deficit” of 152,464 homes, slightly better than in 2011.

According to FUPROVI’s 2012 report, 5.8 percent of the housing in the Central Region, which includes the San José greater metropolitan area, is considered to be in “poor” condition, along with upwards of 13.4 percent along the Atlantic Coast, the Huétar Atlántica Region.

The 2012 report listed 98,965 homes in “poor” condition across Costa Rica, roughly 8 percent of the country’s housing.

Finding affordable, dignified housing in Costa Rica is especially difficult for poor Ticos who can’t afford the housing stock available and lack access to traditional housing credit from banks.

“The purpose of micro-financing is that it offers [lower-income people] financing in amounts they can generally afford,” said Torre H. Nelson, area vice president of Habitat for Humanity, who represents all participating Latin American countries and the Caribbean.

Unlike traditional home ownership, the program also provides some security for people who enroll.

“There’s a difference between a mortgage loan and micro-financing,” Nelson said. Many households in the micro-financing program have a co-signer, or they use personal property as collateral, although the latter practice is inconsistent.

“Most organizations aren’t interested in collecting TVs for collateral. It’s just too expensive for them,” he said.

According to Nelson, strong organizations have shown enormous success with the program; he estimates that default rates are as low as 5 percent and rarely exceed 7 percent. Instead of being evicted from a property, defaulting households may damage their credit history and ruin their chances for a future loan.

Micro-loan proponents believe that the nontraditional loans — often lasting three months instead of 30 years — will benefit poor would-be homeowners and open untapped revenue streams for local banks.

Housing micro-finance projects have has success in Peru, Bolivia, Mexico, El Salvador, Nicaragua, Ecuador, the Dominican Republic, Panama and Brazil.

Robert Isenberg contributed to this story.

 

Trending Now

Nicaragua Faces UN Scrutiny Over Human Rights Violations and Repression

A panel of United Nations human rights experts pressed the international community on Thursday to take action against Nicaragua's leaders, Daniel Ortega and Rosario...

Trump Pushes MAGA Agenda in Latin America

In a speech in Riyadh in May, President Donald Trump denounced generations of US interventionism, saying the Middle East was only made worse by...

United States seeks Homeland Security offices in Ecuador

The United States is interested in establishing offices of its Department of Homeland Security at “strategic” facilities in Ecuador, where the head of that...

Costa Rica Bans Tattoos and Makeup in Schools

The Ministry of Public Education (MEP) has rolled out new guidelines that will reshape how students present themselves in public schools across Costa Rica...

The Killers Set to Rock Costa Rica Again in 2026

Rock fans in Costa Rica have reason to mark their calendars. The Killers, the Las Vegas band behind timeless anthems like "Mr. Brightside" and...

American Airlines Adds Daily Chicago Flight to Costa Rica

American Airlines has started a new daily flight between Juan Santamaría International Airport in San José and Chicago O’Hare International Airport. The service began...
spot_img
Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Travel Insurance
Costa Rica Rocking Chait
Costa Rica Travel

Latest News from Costa Rica