However, the financial sector
in Haiti is underdeveloped, with a ratio of private-sector credit to GDP of
only 12 percent. This is among the lowest in the world. The mortgage system was
small in the pre-disaster years and has since decreased by 14 percent to a mere
$68 million of outstanding mortgages, one percent of GDP and only 8 percent of the total loan portfolio
of banks.[iii]
Developer finance and finance for rental housing is equally limited. The
banking system is highly liquid, with assets of $3.7 billion and a loan
portfolio of only $822 million. However, banks are reluctant to make mortgage
loans because incomes of the great majority of the population are unstable and
collateral is unreliable, resulting in high perceived credit risk. There are no
credit bureaus in Haiti. In addition, the pool of qualified borrowers is
limited due to low incomes. Transaction costs on mortgage lending are high
(land transfer taxes and mortgage registration taxes run between 3.5 percent and
7 percent each, on top of insurance and bank fees), making affordability
problems even worse. Mortgage rates on 20-year adjustable rate loans were on
average 10 percent to 12 percent in July 2011 and down payments were typically 20 percent.
There are nine banks operating
in the mortgage sector in Haiti. Sogebel, the only mortgage bank, is the
largest lender, with about 29 percent of total mortgage lending in the country.
As of March 2011, it had 650 mortgage loans for a total outstanding of $22.8
million. Unibank and Scotiabank were the next largest housing lenders. The two
state-owned banks are making efforts to expand mortgage lending, particularly
for civil servants and other salaried workers.
Credit
Unions and microfinance lenders offer home improvement loan products—typically
three- to five-year loans of $2,500 to $5,000. Interest rates are 18 percent to30
percent, depending on the guarantees offered. The reach of these programs has
been limited, however.[iv]
[i]Oxfam—Haiti
Progress Report 2010, January 6, 2011
[ii] Ibid
[iii] USAID,
Support Development of a Government-of-Haiti-Led Action Plan for Expanding the
Availability of Housing Finance, Assessment of Options for Stimulating Housing
Finance in Haiti, Draft August 2011
[iv] Ibid
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