An analysis of rural homelessness in Pakistani ([dagger]).
Sheikh, Khalid Hameed ; Arif, Ghulam Mohammad
1. INTRODUCTION
The concept of developing the country without taking into
consideration the development of the rural areas is meaningless. [United
Nations (1968)]. More than 70 percent of the population in Pakistan
lives in the rural areas. Therefore, there is a need to place greater
emphasis on the development of these areas. One sector which needs
special attention is housing.
Analysing the housing situation in the rural areas, one has to take
into account the structure of agricultural land ownership in the country
as well as population growth. This is because rural poverty is
intensified by the land tenure system which gives rise to a large number
of landless labour households [Irfan and Arif (1988)]. One-third of the
rural households, associated with agriculture, have access to a very
small segment of cultivated land because of uneven land distribution
[Government of Pakistan (1980)]. Besides this, low agricultural
productivity is also an impediment to better rural housing. In this
situation, the poor rural population, which cannot afford to own houses
reside in the shelters provided to them by their respective landlords.
A number of studies by Sandhu (1972); Ashfaq (1974) and Zaki
(1981), have analysed housing issues in Pakistan but these studies,
contribute towards understanding the housing problems in urban areas
only as, they shed no light on the issues of rural housing in Pakistan
where more than 70 percent of Pakistan's population live in
sub-standard housing facilities. The present study gives an econometric
analysis of rural homelessness in Pakistan.
2. DATA SOURCE AND METHODOLOGY
The present study is based on the Housing Census of 1980. For the
purpose of comparison the districts of 1980 Housing Census have been
merged according to the 1960 Housing Census district boundaries. Rural
homelessness is analysed within the framework of the Ordinary Least
Square (OLS) method for 46 observations indicating 46 districts.
3. HOUSING SITUATION IN RURAL AREAS
In Pakistan, rural housing is still mostly traditional, poor in
quality and very deficient in the provision of drinking water and
sanitary facilities. More than half of the rural population live in
one-room dwelling units, approximately with 6 persons per dwelling,
(Appendix I). Moreover, one-sixth of the rural population is homeless.
One-fifth of the existing rural housing stock needs reconstruction or
renovation because these units are more than thirty years old
[Government of Pakistan (1984)].
(i) Homeless Population
The Housing Census of 1980 does not provide direct information
about the homeless rural population. The estimation procedure is based
on the assumption that the inhabitants living in rent-free houses are
called homeless although they have shelter which is provided to them by
the landowners to reside and cultivate their lands. But this is
temporary and inadequate shelter and liable to be vacated without any
reason.
The estimates of the homeless population show that about 9 million
of the rural inhabitants were homeless in 1980 which constitutes about
16 percent of the total rural population (Appendix I). The percentage of
the homeless population was high in the Punjab and NWFP provinces while
it was relatively low in Sindh and Balochistan.
(ii) Overcrowded Population
This is 'the proportion of rural population which lives in
one-room dwelling units'. These units do not fulfil the minimum
requirement due to the large size of the households in the rural areas.
The estimates of the overcrowded population given in Appendix I
show that 50.4 percent of the rural population was living in
'one-room' dwelling units with a density of about 6 persons
per unit. The overcrowding situation is very alarming in Sindh and
Balochistan with a rate of 69.5 percent and 60.8 percent respectively
with a density of about 7 persons residing in 'one-room'
units. Whereas 45 percent and 44.2 percent rural population of Punjab
and NWFP with a density of about 6 persons per housing unit exhibit the
overcrowding situation in these provinces.
The result in Appendix I shows that person per housing unit
increased by 1.7 persons during the period 1960 to 1980. This change is
more pronounced in Sindh and Balochistan showing an increase of 2.2 and
2.9 persons respectively.
It is clear from Appendix II that the average number of
'persons per room' increased from 3.3 in 1960 to 3.6 in 1980
for rural Pakistan. However, this situation is not comparable with the
ideal situation of one room for each person in the household.
(iii) Rooms per Housing Unit
The results in Appendix II show that the average number of rooms
per housing unit has increased from 1.6 in 1960 to 1.8 in 1980. Almost
the same trend in increase has been observed for all the provinces.
Results in Appendix II show a 6 percent decrease in
"one-room' dwelling units for Pakistan and Punjab. A
tremendous decrease of 17.4 percent and 11.7 percent has been observed
for NWFP and Balochistan. This 6 percent decrease has been offset with a
5 percent increase in dwelling units with two-rooms and three and more
rooms. The same trend has been observed at the provincial as well as at
the district level.
4. REGRESSION RESULTS
The conditions of rural housing discussed in the preceding sections
are subject to empirical investigation and can be explained by examining
the various factors that might affect (i) homelessness, (ii) housing
density and (iii) room(s) addition in housing units.
(i) Homelessness
Homelessness, one of the major problems of the rural areas has been
investigated in Table 1.
The results indicate that the coefficient of LTR is statistically
significant with the negative sign. This suggests that a one percent
increase in the literacy rate will reduce approximately one-half percent
of homeless rural population. Educated rural inhabitants move to urban
centres or go abroad for employment which in turn improves their
housing.
The coefficient of PWH, persons per household working on their
holdings, is found statistically significant with a positive sign which
suggests that the work on their holdings does not provide them
sufficient additional amount for the improvement or construction of a
house due to urideremployment in the agricultural sector. Ideally, the
coefficient of PWH should have possessed a negative sign because of the
fact that an increase in the workers per household, increases the
households earnings and availability of more funds would have reduced
homelessness. Apparently, this effect is absent in the case of rural
Pakistan.
The coefficients for TNH and PLH, are found to be statistically
significant at the 1 percent and 5 percent level of significance
respectively. The permanent hired workers (pure landless) live with
their families in the shelters provided by the landlords (employers)
where they work.
(ii) Housing Density
The regression results corresponding to housing density (HDEN) are
presented in Table 2.
It is clear from Table 2 that the literacy rate has a significant
negative impact on housing density. This finding is consistent with the
fact that educated persons have better chances of employment compared
with illiterates. Furthermore, educated persons are more aware of the
benefits of better housing.
Like the literacy rate, migration has a negative impact on housing
density. In other words, migration decreases the number of persons per
housing unit. These findings are not altogether surprising because of
the fact that migration from rural to urban centres is predominantly by
adult males Furthermore, most Pakistani workers working in the Middle
East have migrated from the rural areas of the country. Remittances sent
by these workers to their kith and kin must have affected the concerned
households' living style in the rural areas.
The cultivated area per rural inhabitant variable turned out to be
statistically significant with a negative sign. This suggests that the
increase in the availability of more land for cultivation for the rural
population decreases the housing density. The number of workers per
household variable exerts a positive influence on housing density. This
indicates that work on their holdings does not provide sufficient
additional income for construction of new houses due to the low
productivity of agricultural land and the scarcity of available land to
each worker in the household.
This situation indicates the fact that to meet population pressure
there is possibility of constructing additional room(s) in the existing
housing unit rather than constructing a completely new housing unit.
Family size is found to exert a significant influence on housing
density. It is obvious that large family size due to high population
growth will influence HDEN which in turn will deteriorate the housing
situation.
(iii) Housing Units by Number of Rooms
Table 3 presents the regression results of housing units by number
of rooms.
As mentioned earlier more than half of the rural population in
Pakistan is living in one-room housing units with 6 persons on average
(Appendix I).
The results in Table 3 present interesting facts regarding the
factors affecting housing units by the number of rooms. The literacy
rate and out-migration within Pakistan have a negative impact on housing
units with one room while these factors affect positively housing units
with more than one room. This finding suggests that as the literacy rate
increases and out-migration takes place, the demand for housing units
with one room decreases while the demand for more than one room
increases. This is quite consistent with the fact that education
enhances the civic sense while out-migration increases income and both
these factors in turn increase the demand for housing units with more
than one room.
The variable, workers per household working on their holdings is
statistically significant and shows a negative sign for one-room
dwelling units and positive for housing units with two and more rooms.
The income effect appears to be dominant in this case.
The effect of the ratio of irrigated to the total cultivated area
on housing units with one room is found to be positive while it affects
negatively those housing units which have more than one room. This is an
interesting result which suggests that as the ratio of irrigated to
total cultivated area increase, farmers will demand more housing units
with one room. On the other hand, they will not prefer to demand housing
units with more than one room because land use for irrigation is more
sacrosanct to farmers than the construction of houses with more than one
room.
5. CONCLUSIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS
The overall housing situation in the rural areas remains poor. The
only positive trend in rural housing over the past twenty years has been
witnessed in the shape of the addition of room(s) in the existing
housing units. Homelessness and overcrowding with lack of housing
amenities are found to be the main problems of rural housing. The
habitation density level has increased from 4.9 persons in the 1960 to
6.6 persons in 1980.
The problems of homelessness, overcrowding, housing density and
number of rooms per housing unit are found to be the outcome of higher
population growth and rural poverty which are the manifestation of our
agrarian structure. These problems cannot be solved in isolation without
the positive support of the public sector and without the development of
rural infrastructure.
Rural development with an emphasis on compulsory education will
solve the problems of illiteracy, underemployment, rural-urban migration and consequently will help in the improvement of rural housing
situation.
Appendix--I
Estimates of Homeless and Overcrowded Rural Population in Pakistan
Homeless
No. of Population
Housing as Percent
Country/ Units with Persons per Homeless of Total
Province Non-owners Housing Unit Population Population
(000) 1960 1973 1980 (000)
Pakistan 1377 4.9 5.3 6.6 9042 15.6
Punjab 896 4.9 5.3 6.3 5647 16.9
Sindh 212 4.9 5.2 7.1 1500 13.9
NWFP 213 5.3 5.4 6.9 1471 15.9
Balochistan 56 4.7 5.1 7.6 424 11.6
No. of
Housing Persons Population
Units with per Living in Percent of
Country/ One Room Housing One Room Total
Province Only Unit Houses Population
(000) (000)
Pakistan 4974 5.9 29338 50.4
Punjab 2812 5.5 15467 45.0
Sindh 1136 6.6 7494 69.5
NWFP 704 5.9 4155 44.2
Balochistan 322 6.9 2222 60.8
Source: Housing Census 1960 and 1980 and HED 1973.
Appendix--II
Housing Density by Different Measures
Percent Increase/Decrease
in Housing Units * with 1960 Housing Census
Country/ One Two Three+ Persons Room per
Province Room Rooms Rooms per Rooms Housing Unit
Pakistan -6.0 5.0 1.0 3.3 1.6
Punjab -5.6 5.8 -0.2 3.2 1.7
Sindh -1.3 1.9 -0.6 4.8 1.3
NWFP -17.4 8.6 8.8 3.6 1.6
Balochistan -11.7 5.7 6.0 4.0 1.3
1980 Housing Census
Country/ Persons Room per
Province per Rooms Housing Unit
Pakistan 3.6 1.8
Punjab 3.4 1.9
Sindh 4.7 1.5
NWFP 3.6 1.9
Balochistan 4.5 1.7
Source: Housing Census 1960 and 1980).
* (Percent of Housing Units in 1980--Percent
of Housing Units in 1960).
Authors' Note: Paper presented in the Sixth Annual General
Meeting of the Pakistan Society of Development Economists, Islamabad.
REFERENCES
Ashfaq, Khalid (1974) Housing West Pakistan: 1970-2000. EKISTICS 38
: 224.
Irfan, Mohammad, and G. M. Arif (1988) Landlessness in Rural Areas
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Pakistan, Government of (1963) Census of Pakistan: Population,
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Division.
Pakistan, Government of (1973) Housing, Economic and Demographic
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Pakistan, Islamabad: Ministry of Interior, States and Frontier
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Organization.
Sandhu, Manzoor Hussain (1972) Low-income Housing in Urban Areas.
Lahore: (PERI Publication No. 150)
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The Pakistan Development Review 20 : 2.
([dagger]) Comments on this paper have not been received.
(1) We also estimated a regression where 'percent of owned
houses' was regressed against explanatory variable and all the
variables show a negative association with the dependent variable except
literacy ratio, which shows a positive sign.
(2) A tenant household cultivates the agricultural land which taken
from other household(s) against a fixed rent in cash/kind or a share in
the produce [Irfan and Arif (1988)].
(3) The households who neither own the land nor tenants and are
recorded as permanently hired workers in agriculture census of 1980.
These converted into pure landless households by dividing with 1.6--the
average earners per household [Irfan and Arif (1988)].
KHALID HAMEED SHEIKH and GHULAM MOHAMMAD ARIF *
* The authors are, respectively, Research Demographer and Staff
Economist at the Pakistan Institute of Development Economics, Islamabad.
Table 1
Regression Results (1)
Explanatory Variables
Eq. Dependent
No. Variable C LTR PWH TNH
1. HLP -3.1 -0.49 6.3 9.5
(0.7) (3.4) * (3.4) * (1.7) **
Explanatory Variables
Eq. Dependent
No. Variable PLH [[bar.R].sup.2] F-ratio
1. HLP 0.0006
(3.9) * 0.50 12.1
Notes: t-ratios are given in the parenthesis.
* Denotes significant at 1 percent level.
** Denotes significant at 5 percent level.
HLP = Percent of homeless rural population.
LTR = Literacy ratio.
PWH = Persons per household working on their holdings.
TNH = Proportion of tenant households. (2)
PLH = Number of pure landless household. (3)
Table 2
Regression Results
Explanatory Variables
Eq. Dependent
No. Variable C LTR OMG CULR
2. HDEN 6.3 -0.06 -6.7 -1.4
(11.5) * (3.3) * (2.3) ** (5.1) *
Explanatory Variables
Eq. Dependent
No. Variable PWH FSZ [[bar.R].sup.2] F-ratio
2. HDEN 0.57 0.11
(3.2) * (2.5) ** 0.53 11.3
Notes: t-ratios are given in the parenthesis
* Denotes significant at 1 percent level.
** Denotes significant at 5 percent level.
HDEN = Number of persons per dwelling unit in rural areas
OMG = Outmigants (within Palastan/Rural Population)
of the ith district
CULR = Cultivated area per rural inhabitant of the tth district
FSZ = Family size of the rural household and the definition
of LTR and PWH are the same as used in Table 1.
Table 3
Regression Results
Explanatory Variables
Eq. Dependent
No. Variable C LTR OMG PWH
3. RM1 103.5 -0.65 -140.7 -12.0
(7.7) * (2.0) ** (2.2) * (2.6) *
4. RM2 5.6 0.5 64.5 3.8
(0.8) (3.0) * (2.0) ** (1.7) ***
5. RM3 -8.7 0.14 75.0 8.2
(1.1) (0.8) (2.1) ** (3.2) *
Explanatory Variables
Eq. Dependent
No. Variable IRR PRIND [[bar.R].sup.2] F-ratio
3. RM1 25.3 -0.08
(2.9) * (1.5) *** 0.34 5.7
4. RM2 -4.9 0.01
(1.1) (0.4)
5. RM3 -20.5 0.07
(4.2) * (2.3) ** 0.34 5.7
Notes: t-ratios are given in the parenthesis
* Denotes significant at 1 percent level.
** Denotes significant at 5 percent level.
*** Denotes significant at 10 percent level.
RMI = Percent of housing units with one room only.
RM2 = Percent of housing units with two rooms only.
RM3 = Percent of housing units with three and more rooms only.
IRR = Irrigated area/total cultivated area
PRIND = Productivity index of each district and the definitions
of LTR, OMG and PWH are the same as used in Tables 1 and 2.