Improving the effectiveness of formal housing delivery in Tanzania
Promoting evidence-based practices to enable solutions scaling by business
The rapid growth of cities in sub-Saharan Africa represents opportunities for hundreds of millions of citizens; hence understanding which policies promote efficient property development by business is key to ensuring that these cities reach their full potential. This research studies whether urban planning regulation can worsen housing outcomes, reduce social inclusivity and increase inequality in Tanzanian cities. The aim is to promote evidence-based practices to inform effective business solutions and enable the scaling of solutions by the private sector to generate large-scale and enduring change.
SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA
Tanzania
Data story
Improving the effectiveness of formal housing delivery in Tanzania
Publications
Ask a Local: Improving the Public Pricing of Land Titles in Urban Tanzania
Abstract
Information on willingness-to-pay is key for public pricing and allocation of services but not easily collected. Studying land titles in Dar-es-Salaam, we ask whether local leaders know and will reveal plot owners’ willingness-to-pay. We randomly assign leaders to predict under different settings then elicit owners’ actual willingness-to-pay. Demand is substantial, but below exorbitant fees. Leaders can predict the aggregate demand curve and distinguish variation across owners. Predictions worsen when used to target subsidies, but adding cash incentives mitigates this. Finally, we demonstrate that leader-elicited information can improve the public pricing of title deeds, raising uptake while maintaining public funds.