To Keep House Prices In Check, Construct More Roads
The correlation
between building road infrastructure and restricting house prices to moderate
levels in Indian metros
by Mr. Anuj Puri – Chairman & Country Head, JLL India
“It is not wealth that built our roads but roads that built our wealth.”
This line by
former American president John F Kennedy holds true not only for the US but
also India. Road infrastructure seems to be closely linked to residential price
movements. Length of road construction is known to have a direct bearing on
real estate. More importantly, it is equally vital in potentially lowering
average house prices, particularly in urban areas, as can be seen in the graph
below.
As road
lengths increase, connectivity improves across a wider geography - thereby
attracting new project launches at lower price points. This can reduce prices
in urban agglomerations. If more roads are constructed in rural areas, price
rise in urban cities could be restricted to moderate levels. This would help
increase affordable housing projects near the metros.
Source: RBI, Ministry of Roads, JLL REIS
Currently, the only solution to the
problem of urban housing shortage in Indian cities is building new
infrastructure to connect more precincts to the city centre. This theory
becomes clearer when we compare the pan-India average residential price growth
to the total length of road constructed in India annually which is released by
the Ministry of Roads.
Not surprisingly, there was a strong
inverse correlation between the two indicators. It suggests that when new roads
are constructed across rural and urban areas, the spread of development happens
over a wider geography. This can potentially bring down the premium that certain
urban agglomerations command for having better connectivity. This could be
particularly true for infrastructure-starved cities in India such as Mumbai and
Bengaluru.
Fortunately, road infrastructure has
emerged as a key focus area for the current government. According to media
reports earlier this year, the road transport and highways ministry has set an
ambitious target of laying more than 40 km of roads every day in 2016-17 - more
than double the current pace. The construction target too has been set at
15,000 km against the 6,000 km constructed last year.
The Indian government plans to
invest INR 3 trillion (US$ 44.73 billion) for developing 35,000 km of roads
across the country, of which 21,000 km will be economic corridors and 14,000 km
will be feeder routes. This is expected to improve freight movement, ease
traffic bottlenecks and improve inter-city connectivity in the country. It will
be interesting to watch residential property price movements in the coming
years.
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