Botswana
Country Profile
Of Botswana’s 2 million
people, approximately 62 percent live in urban areas. In 2013, the total
population grew at 0.9 percent, whereas the urban population grew at 1.9
percent (WDI 2014).
In 2003, the percentage of
owner occupied housing units (including both cities/towns and urban villages)
was 44.51 percent. The owner occupation rate for just cities and towns was 20.4
percent, whereas the rate for urban villages was significantly higher at 66.3
percent, indicating that most people in cities live in rental properties. In
rural areas, the owner occupied rate was even higher at 80.2 percent (Central
Statistics Office 2003).
Like many other African
countries, Botswana has a complicated three-tiered land tenure system. Land in
Botswana is divided into three categories: freehold land, state land and tribal
land. Freehold land gives perpetual ownership and as a result, can be easily
used as collateral for a mortgage. State land is granted to individuals with a
Fixed Period State Grant (FPSG), which is essentially a 99 year lease. This
lease can be easily extended for a small fee and is generally accepted as
collateral for a mortgage loan, although not by all commercial banks. Finally,
tribal land is issued as a grant under customary law, which can be inherited
and transferred. The customary law grant can be converted into a common law
lease, which is granted for 99 years. Banks generally do not accept tribal land
as collateral for mortgages, as the land does not belong to the individual,
only what is built on the land.
At the end of 2013, the
total amount of mortgage loans outstanding was $1.03 billion, or 6.64 percent
of GDP, upwards from 2.29 percent in 2003. In addition, the proportion of
mortgage loans in commercial banks’ portfolios has increased from around 20
percent in 2003 to 28.3 percent in 2013 (Bank of Botswana 2013). Mortgages are
provided both by commercial banks and the Botswana Building Society (BBS),
which is a quasi-governmental organization.
Most low and lower-middle income
groups do not qualify for traditional mortgages by commercial banks due to the
strict credit requirements, specifically the type of land title required. Though
commercial banks have a debt-to-income (DtI) ratio of 40 to 45 percent and a
maximum Loan-to-Value (LTV) requirement of 90%, they often require a freehold
title on the property in order to accept that property as collateral for a
mortgage (Berge and Jing). Furthermore, despite the relatively high
debt-to-income ratio, affordability is a major issue since the average salary
in Botswana is too low for the majority of households to pay for a complete
home with a commercial mortgage.
The Botswana Building
Society requires a 25 percent debt-to-income ratio and 100 percent LTV (Berge
and Jing). The mortgages offered by the BBS are generally smaller than those of
commercial banks and are meant to finance incremental building. Many people in
Botswana build their houses incrementally by taking out a number of small loans
over time. Lower income or rural applicants on tribal land are forced to take
out personal loans with higher interest rates, which increases the cost of
borrowing.
Moreover, the BBS offers
partially subsidized interest rates of 10.8 percentage (2013) over a maximum
repayment period of 25 years (Botswana Building Society), whereas commercial
banks base their interest rates off of the prime lending rate over a shorter
time span of 15-25 years.
Similar to the commercial
banks, the BBS will only accept land that is transferable as property. However, BBS accepts properties on tribal
land as collateral when potential borrowers convert their plots to common law
leases. Given the subsidized rate, smaller loan sizes and more lenient lending
conditions, BBS reaches a lower income group than commercial banks.
On the funding side,
commercial banks rely exclusively on retail deposits while the BBS has a hybrid
funding mix of retail deposits and government funding.