Business News of Friday, 29 May 2026

Source: www.thenationonlineng.net

Fed Govt, FMBN sign N10b MoU housing finance

Federal Government of Nigeria Federal Government of Nigeria

The Federal Government and the Federal Mortgage Bank of Nigeria (FMBN), have signed a N10 billion Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) aimed at expanding access to affordable housing finance for federal civil servants through mortgage support, home renovation loans, rent assistance and incremental housing development.

The initiative follows the Federal Government’s approval of an N10 billion FMBN-funded housing loan scheme for workers, viewed as one of the more direct interventions targeted at improving worker welfare amid the present economic realities.

Speaking during a strategic meeting, the Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer of FMBN, Shehu Osidi, said the latest collaboration was designed to improve affordability and expand access to housing finance for workers.

According to Osidi, the FMBN had already disbursed over N2.6 billion in Home Renovation Loans to 3,051 federal civil servants. The figure, stakeholders say, demonstrates that the partnership already has an implementation record before the newly approved N10billon expansion.

Osidi emphasised the need for stronger collaboration in designing housing products tailored specifically to the realities confronting public servants

“We are desirous of working out unique housing solutions with Federal Government for the benefit of our teeming federal civil servants,” he stated.

The partnership was later formalised with the signing of the N10 billon MoU at the Office of the Head of the Civil Service of the Federation. Under the arrangement, FMBN will provide funding for on-lending to civil servants, thereby creating a more structured framework for delivering affordable housing finance.

Describing the agreement as a major welfare intervention, Osidi said it marked “the dawn of a renewed commitment to improving the lives and welfare of Nigerian workers”.

According to him, the collaboration would further simplify workers’ access to FMBN products covering homeownership, renovation support, rent assistance and incremental housing development.

Industry stakeholders also welcomed the initiative, describing it as timely given the worsening cost-of-living crisis.

Housing experts note that many workers now spend more than half of their income on housing-related expenses. Inflation, foreign exchange instability, rising energy costs and soaring building material prices have significantly increased the cost of housing development nationwide. Developers and landlords, faced with rising operational expenses, often transfer those costs directly to tenants. As a result, housing affordability has deteriorated sharply over the last few years.

An Estate surveyor and valuer, Olufemi Oyedele, while acknowledging the importance of affordable housing support, raised concerns over what he described as fragmentation within the housing delivery system. “We are having so many programmes on housing that we may not be able to coordinate all these programmes,” he said.

Oyedele questioned why the N10bn facility could not simply be channelled through existing structures such as the Federal Integrated Staff Housing programme. “That N10billon fund, I don’t see why they cannot put it under Federal Integrated Staff Housing. Why should it be under the Federal Mortgage Bank of Nigeria again? We already have a structure,” he stated.

According to him, rather than creating overlapping systems, existing structures should be strengthened to improve accountability and efficiency. “We already have a special purpose vehicle. Let us empower them. Let us strengthen their structure so that they can perform,” he added.

Executive Director of the Housing Development Advocacy Network, Festus Adebayo, said the partnership could substantially improve access to affordable housing finance for civil servants.

“I am aware that the MOU was signed in April 2026 to use it to improve access to affordable mortgages, rent support, renovation loans, and construction finance under the National Housing Fund. There have been complaints by civil servants earlier that they are not able to access the National Housing Fund,” he said.

Adebayo noted that the intervention could widen access for workers who were previously unable to benefit from NHF financing. “With this funding, I can assure you that the number of accesses will be increased. And why is the Federal Mortgage Bank so critical? Because as of today, the Federal Mortgage Bank interest rates under the National Housing Fund are the lowest in the country, which is six per cent. And that is why the Federal Mortgage Bank is very important,” he added.

According to him, affordable interest rates remain critical if workers are realistically transitioning into homeownership. “And if civil servants are to be helped to own a home, there is no other place where we can get such an interest rate,” he stated.

Adebayo explained that the collaboration could also improve worker welfare beyond housing alone, saying, “What is likely to be the impact of this collaboration is that it will improve mortgage access, because this time around, civil servants who previously could not afford homes may now access lower-interest housing finance. It will also provide support for the middle and low-income earners who have been forgotten.”

He argued that Nigeria’s housing sector already suffers from institutional fragmentation, saying, “Since we have a programme already called FISH, the mandate is to ensure that there is affordable housing for civil servants. Supposed to empower that structure and not create another one,” Oyedele said.

He also referenced the Nigeria Mortgage Refinance Company as another existing institution within the housing finance ecosystem: “It’s like we are trying to fragment the structures, and it should not be able to monitor and evaluate the performances of these fragmented structures. We already have another one called the Nigeria Mortgage Refinance Company.”

Drawing comparisons with housing systems in developed countries, Oyedele cautioned against operating too many overlapping agencies and programmes: “Countries like the UK are not operating housing on too many platforms, on too many structures. Let us keep the structures as manageable as possible so that we won’t be running into problems. At the end of the day, what we will be hearing is corruption and lack of accountability because there is no proper structure to manage them or to monitor them.”

He further warned that fragmented programmes could increase administrative overhead costs at the expense of actual housing delivery.

“Secondly, because the funds will now be fragmented, the overheads will also be fragmented. You know all these people will have administrative workers. Now, by this, we are spending so much on the administration whereas the real capital projects will not be implemented because of a lack of funds,” he stated. “So instead of creating another structure, why not empower the existing structure?” he said.

For many stakeholders, the significance of the collaboration extends beyond the size of the fund itself. It reflects growing concern over Nigeria’s deepening housing affordability crisis and the urgent need for structured interventions.

Nigeria’s housing deficit, estimated by stakeholders at over 20 million units, remains one of the country’s biggest developmental challenges. Rapid urbanisation, population growth, inflation, rising construction costs and weak mortgage systems have all contributed to the widening gap between housing demand and supply.

Millions of Nigerians remain trapped in overcrowded apartments, substandard housing or an increasingly expensive rental market. For civil servants whose salaries are often fixed despite rising living costs, the burden is particularly severe.

Across major cities, workers are increasingly relocating to distant suburbs where accommodation is cheaper, only to spend heavily on transportation and endure exhausting commuting hours.

The widespread practice of demanding one or two years’ rent upfront has further worsened the pressure on salary earners.

Industry analysts say the psychological impact of unstable housing conditions has become increasingly visible among workers struggling with financial anxiety and declining living standards. This is partly why affordable mortgage systems are now viewed not only as housing interventions but also as tools for economic stability and worker productivity.