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The housing crisis for the poor in India’s capital

And yet no Indians are running behind food trucks and pillaging it as its seen in Pakistan.

That is absurd because there are still many Indians who lack access to adequate housing and two meals every day.

The issue with Pakistani members is that they simply cite statistics while omitting the fact that Pakistan has six times less people than India.

If we measure the situation by ratiowise, Pakistan's predicament is even equal or worse than India's.
 
As India becomes the world’s most populated country with 1.4 billion people, housing, particularly for low-income urban households, remains a longstanding challenge.

According to a report by India’s Ministry of Housing and Urban Affairs, there was a housing gap of about 19 million units throughout Indian cities in 2012. The study, done in light of the 2011 census, added that housing for low-income groups accounted for more than 95 percent of the deficit.

India’s 2021 census was suspended due to the coronavirus pandemic and is yet to be announced.

Another study by the Indian Council for Research on International Economic Relations (ICRIER) in 2020 found that India’s urban housing shortage rose 54 percent to 29 million in 2018 from 18.78 million in 2012. It included households that were homeless, households that lived in inadequate houses that could not be upgraded, houses that were obsolete and those that lived in congested conditions.

According to the Delhi government’s Economic Survey for 2020-2021, 6.75 million people lived in poor housing in low-income settlements only in New Delhi, India’s capital, which included 695 slum settlements, 1,797 unauthorised colonies and 362 urban villages.

An additional 2.4 million new housing units were required to meet New Delhi’s housing deficit, it said.
“I have lived in Delhi for 40 years, worked hard my entire life, but I could never afford a better house for myself,” Shah Alam, an autorickshaw driver who lives in a single room with his family in a slum in the city’s Ghazipur area, told Al Jazeera.

Experts say the slow speed of building affordable housing, reduced land and space entitlements, accelerated housing production for the privileged classes, and large-scale demolitions and evictions have contributed to the urban housing crisis in India.

India’s government has implemented a number of housing policies and projects in response to the perennial challenge, mainly among low and middle-income groups.

The Delhi Urban Shelter Improvement Board (DUSIB) says it is trying to improve housing quality and provide shelter to the homeless in the city of nearly 20 million residents.


“The board is implementing the approved plan schemes to improve the quality of housing in Delhi,” the board’s CEO Garima Gupta told Al Jazeera.

But activists say the houses built under such projects are insufficient in number, often unaffordable, or unviable for those most in need.

“Given the high cost of land and construction materials, building low-cost houses for low-income people is not economically viable. The low-income class cannot afford the house unless the charges are subsidised,” Abdul Shakeel, urban practitioner and member of a civil society group on housing in New Delhi, told Al Jazeera.

Delhi is suffering from illegal immigrants from bangladesh and rohangias.
 
Negative news about India and jai hind indians be like.

F16FpVBacAA8QyV.jpg
 
This thread is about - your house bein dirty, no no your home is dirtier.

I'm not sure why Pakistani members constantly try to cast target on India when they are aware that their own country is filthy to live.

The only thing that is true in this situation is that both nations are among the dirtiest and most hardest to live in.
They've been doing this for decades and will still continue to do so, in simple terms they still believe that they're successful enough to criticise India's progress so far.

Negative news about India and jai hind indians be like.

View attachment 949983
Making stupid threads and then jerking over it, no wonder our humsayas ended up being a failure :lol:.
idk why indians dont want to admit their failure to fully embrace market economics and capitalism
What failure? India's homelessness rates is very low, I don't want to talk about someone else who occupies number 2 spot.
Delhi is suffering from illegal immigrants from bangladesh and rohangias.
Which is why all such "homeless population" in our cities who gets interviewed end up being Muslims who have very Bengali style names instead of typical North Indian Persianised muslim names. Those lungis can't even speak hindi properly.
 
That is absurd because there are still many Indians who lack access to adequate housing and two meals every day.

The issue with Pakistani members is that they simply cite statistics while omitting the fact that Pakistan has six times less people than India.

If we measure the situation by ratiowise, Pakistan's predicament is even equal or worse than India's.
None of these countries in South Asia has the capacity to be developed nation...since neither of them have institutions that can help them grow properly..
A benefit of being a part of large country like India is that you have resources both Human and Physical that can brainstorm , build necessary institution and infra to help out the country in long run.
Pakistan for example prolly lacks a Planning Commision or Niti Aayog that can set expectations for 5, 10, 15 years..
It neither has a proper Election Commission to conduct democratic elections..as of now its a crypto-dictatorship under Pak army...
 
As India becomes the world’s most populated country with 1.4 billion people, housing, particularly for low-income urban households, remains a longstanding challenge.

According to a report by India’s Ministry of Housing and Urban Affairs, there was a housing gap of about 19 million units throughout Indian cities in 2012. The study, done in light of the 2011 census, added that housing for low-income groups accounted for more than 95 percent of the deficit.

India’s 2021 census was suspended due to the coronavirus pandemic and is yet to be announced.

Another study by the Indian Council for Research on International Economic Relations (ICRIER) in 2020 found that India’s urban housing shortage rose 54 percent to 29 million in 2018 from 18.78 million in 2012. It included households that were homeless, households that lived in inadequate houses that could not be upgraded, houses that were obsolete and those that lived in congested conditions.

According to the Delhi government’s Economic Survey for 2020-2021, 6.75 million people lived in poor housing in low-income settlements only in New Delhi, India’s capital, which included 695 slum settlements, 1,797 unauthorised colonies and 362 urban villages.

An additional 2.4 million new housing units were required to meet New Delhi’s housing deficit, it said.
“I have lived in Delhi for 40 years, worked hard my entire life, but I could never afford a better house for myself,” Shah Alam, an autorickshaw driver who lives in a single room with his family in a slum in the city’s Ghazipur area, told Al Jazeera.

Experts say the slow speed of building affordable housing, reduced land and space entitlements, accelerated housing production for the privileged classes, and large-scale demolitions and evictions have contributed to the urban housing crisis in India.

India’s government has implemented a number of housing policies and projects in response to the perennial challenge, mainly among low and middle-income groups.

The Delhi Urban Shelter Improvement Board (DUSIB) says it is trying to improve housing quality and provide shelter to the homeless in the city of nearly 20 million residents.


“The board is implementing the approved plan schemes to improve the quality of housing in Delhi,” the board’s CEO Garima Gupta told Al Jazeera.

But activists say the houses built under such projects are insufficient in number, often unaffordable, or unviable for those most in need.

“Given the high cost of land and construction materials, building low-cost houses for low-income people is not economically viable. The low-income class cannot afford the house unless the charges are subsidised,” Abdul Shakeel, urban practitioner and member of a civil society group on housing in New Delhi, told Al Jazeera.

This doesn't help either:-

1693459444231.png
 
None of these countries in South Asia has the capacity to be developed nation...since neither of them have institutions that can help them grow properly..
A benefit of being a part of large country like India is that you have resources both Human and Physical that can brainstorm , build necessary institution and infra to help out the country in long run.
Pakistan for example prolly lacks a Planning Commision or Niti Aayog that can set expectations for 5, 10, 15 years..
It neither has a proper Election Commission to conduct democratic elections..as of now its a crypto-dictatorship under Pak army...
Pakistan can never have an stable govt , history proved it . Forget about the institutions . They never had it in past centuries . They have only religion which they show from morning to evening , but religion can not solve any problem .at the best they can get a taliban type govt .
 
Only solution is godless country with dictatorial govt like china , people of this subcontinent are only suitable to govern by danda.
the better alternative is to give south asia and its people to foreign corporations
 
China and sustainable do not go in the same sentence

Way more sustainable than North America, Pakistan, not to mention Bharat, Bangladesh. I mean this German cartoon has a message. Pity you Binglo-Bharati can't make sense of it:

german_cartoon_india_population_1682352102488_1682352135709.jpg
 
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