Chinese Private Equity Fund (CAD-FUND) to build 20,000 houses for civil servants

This is a timely move and easy to implement, government will just use the accommodation allowance paid to civil servants in repaying CAD-Fund. It then tasks them to build luxury houses and apartments for civil servants that at the current property market is out of reach for them because they are expensive.
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By AGGREY MUTAMBO

Government workers are set to benefit from a housing project funded by a Chinese private equity fund that will see about 20,000 houses built. It follows a deal signed on Thursday between the government, the China-Africa Development Fund (CAD-Fund) with local housing firm Suraya Property Group and China Civil Engineering Construction Company (CCECC). State officials say the project will help reduce the deficiencies in sheltering its workers. The agreement means that the government will provide land on which the units will be built by CCECC, with funding from the CAD-Fund.

“The partnership is such that the government provides land, we provide consultancy, and the CAD-Fund and CCECC provide funding and also provides construction. The government also manages the end products,” said Suraya Group CEO Pete Muraya after the signing ceremony in Nairobi. “We are also addressing all types of housing, where we are targeting maybe a million shillings or less and we are going up to the senior civil servants who may want, maybe a bigger house on a quarter of an acre,” he added.

The construction of 20,000 housing units could help improve the shortage of shelter for government workers, especially in Nairobi. The project targets the police, civil servants, military, parastatal officials and county government workers. But Transport and Infrastructure CS James Macharia admitted there is a huge deficit.

“This project, we believe, is very timely. It will be a catalyst for many other projects,” Mr Macharia told an audience at the Crowne Plaza. “Joint ventures and public-private partnerships can help bridge the gap. For us in government, we shall provide enough incentives, and we need all these partners to compliment and support our efforts.”

The shortage of housing in the country means Kenya needs at least 200,000 units every year. However, the cost of construction has put off most investors and only 50,000 units are put up annually, according to the Transport and Infrastructure Ministry.

The cost of land in Nairobi, for example, takes about half the construction cost, meaning the end products are often very expensive, said Mr Muraya. Within the government itself, the police require about 69,000 more houses to shelter all officers, yet the government has only built 1,000 in the past four years. The project signals the intent of the Chinese to establish base in Kenya by supporting their own enterprises.
The CAD-Fund, China’s largest private equity fund that is controlled by China Development Bank, officially opened its representative office in Nairobi on Thursday. Chi Jianxin, CAD-Fund’s chairman, told reporters the Nairobi office will also be used as a regional headquarters for the eastern Africa region, making it the fourth such office set up in Africa since 2006.

“We do not currently have many investments in Kenya but after the establishment of this regional office. We want to set this Kenya office as the headquarters of the region,” he said. “It provides a big advantages for Kenya as we can improve the local exports by directly investing in firms here.”

The fund was launched in 2007 as part of China’s “Eight Measures” to venture into Africa by then Chinese President Hu Jintao, following the Beijing Summit on China-Africa Cooperation in 2006. It had an initial capital of $1 billion (Sh100 billion) from China Development Bank but raised it to Sh500 billion ($5 billion).

The CAD-Fund often puts money in projects run by Chinese firms in Africa even though it traditionally doesn’t hold controlling stakes in those firms. It has participated in projects around Africa in glass manufacturing, cement (Ethiopia), a power station (Ghana), a port project (Lagos, Nigeria) and an industrial park (Egypt). This is its first project in Kenya.

atleast it will ease the pressure on house prices locally. I have noted prices are already getting slashed on apartments and townhouses for sell

Just have a look at yesterday’s daily nation

Usually civil servant houses cost at most 1/3 of the prevailing housing market prices. My uncle lives in a 4 bedroom bungalow in Kilimani but he is only deducted 8000 a month. He is soon retiring and people are scrambling for that house. It will be the same case here, good modern luxury apartment for very cheap price.

pia kuna hizo behind safaricom house muguga green estate. Good houses and quite cheap

define cheap

hiyo bei spear ameweka. a big four bedroom bungalow in westlands with an SQ at around 20K or less a month is cheap

Aaaiiii, seriousely? 4 bedroom 20k? ziko available bado? Kumbe sisi ndio tunachangia wanaume pesa hii nairobi

hizo ni za civil servants. hawapatii mtu yeyote boss. hata kama wewe ni civil servant you need connections. nyumba za serikali. In KU for example, a three bedroom bungalow with two SQs and + a garage and a large compound ma professor wanalipa 16K per month. tafakari hayo

waaah!

Afadhali niishi kwa rentals… these houses build complacency and laziness… This is the worst comfort zone you can have as a government worker. Hakuna mtu nimeone ameishi kwa hizi nyumba akakuwa na significant progress in life…It’s a curse of stagnation.

ukiwa zuzu you retire with no property or Land to your name since with time unaamini nyumba ni yako

People get into these house and their wives transform the compound wanapanda mpaka maua…others keep dogs, others a kitchen garden…Kids grow up in the hood, etc etc…Mtu akikuwa retrenched unaskia amepata stroke. Ama if the land is to be developed and you are asked to move unaanza kutafuta lawyers. Time za elections zikifika unaanza kuogopa evictions etc etc. Best move rent a house outside and work your way up pole pole mpaka ujenge kwako.

Yes you have to be very disciplined to develop yourself under such conditions

Kweli you know what you are talking about, kwanza if you ever see any stray chicken hapo karibu na kilimani primary kuenda yaya then hiyo imehepa my uncle’s place. You are right the comfort zones can make you stagnate lucky it also depends on the character of the person. At least he build ocha kitambo sana and he has a few businesses ya kuleta mboga.

Still a bad idea… You can’t tell your wife that you want to quit your job and start your hand in business or something like that… When you retire and your kids aren’t financially stable they have to cope with the culture shock of moving from Kilimani to Migori or Kisii where your house is built. His equivalents who are living in private property I bet are more organized at least financially.

I appreciate the developments but I’m against the Chinese way of getting fully into construction. This will be our undoing.

I grew up in Magadi soda now TATA chemicals…after wahindi took over! Upto late 2000, magadi employees enjoyed free housing, water very clean(hakuna siku hupotea) stima…garbage was collected every monday and friday…fumigation was done after every 3 months kwa nyumba zote. Coz of the heat all house have fans + a portable one…na fridge and a gas cooker ama meko depending na your rank, the higher the bigger the house! Na feree medical cover…unakuwa mgojwa kuna magadi hospital huko…Given all that uko na mshahara na maybe school fees ya kulipa pekee…bt 99% of people who left magadi during that time…either died a few yrs later or health problems ama msoto serious…i know a few pals of mine whos dad died while still an employee there, walipewa 5milli…iliisha yote! That place kinda messes one’s development abilities!

Kuna mzee hapa ameretire he has been living in a nice house at kizingo he retired in may, he is literally kneeling to be given another 3 months ajipange pahali atakua akiishi juu he has no property. He mistook the house to be his in perpetuity huyu anaeza saidika aje

Na flats za KRA in Magongo, Mombatha a 2bedroom is 6-10k

This should be the rent price for all over kenya , we have rushed ourselves to New York standards .
Developers and banks have really rushed us, in their schemes to make quick returns.