Creating an enabling environment for housing: Recent reforms in Mexico |
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Authors: | Thomas Lee Zearley |
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Affiliation: | Senior Financial Analyst, Latin America and Caribbean Region , World Bank |
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Abstract: | Abstract A recent World Bank policy statement on housing advocates the reform of government policies, institutions, and regulations to enable housing markets to work more efficiently. The policy statement identifies several instruments that governments can use to address housing market constraints, and to improve the performance of the housing sector as a whole, while paying particular attention to the needs of the poor. In recent years, the government of Mexico has employed many of the enabling instruments described in the World Bank's housing policy statement. This article reviews the role of housing in the Mexican economy and the major reforms that the Mexican government has implemented to improve the operation of the housing market so that private lenders and home builders can play an expanded role in addressing the country's housing needs. The World Bank has supported the government's reform program, and since 1985 it has lent more than $1.2 billion to Mexico for low‐income housing projects. |
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Keywords: | Low‐income housing Mobility Neighborhood |
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