ISSUES AND CHALLENGES IN THE EXECUTION OF PUBLIC SECTOR HOUSING PROJECTS IN NIGERIA
CHAPTER  ONE
              INTRODUCTION
            
1.1   BACKGROUND TO THE STUDY
			  Housing  (Shelter) is unarguably one of the basic necessities of man. It used to be  ranked second after food in the hierarchy of man’s needs but according to Ebie  (2009) it is the first and most important of all rights. According to him,  because of the importance attached to housing and coupled with the fact that  housing in all its ramifications is more than mere shelter, then, execution of  public sector housing embraces all social services and utilities that go to  make a community or neighbourhood a livable environment, this is now a right in  Nigeria. This position is reinforced by section 16(1)(d) of 1999 constitution  under the Fundamental Objectives of State Policy which compels the Nigerian  State “to provide suitable and adequate shelter for all citizens” Even though  this provision is not actionable, it reinforces the call for public sector  driven mass housing provision in Nigeria. Housing being a right entails that  all strata of a society including the less privileged members of the society,  the old, the disadvantaged, the wondering psychotics should own or have access  to decent, safe and sanitary housing accommodation at affordable disposal  prices or rental with secure tenure.
		    
Unfortunately  the reverse is the case as in spite of the policies, institutions and  regulations which various Nigerian Governments have put in place since  independence; there is still dearth of housing for low income segment. A recent  study of housing situation in Nigeria put existing housing stock at 23 per 1000  inhabitant. Housing deficit is put at 15 million housing units (Mabogunje,  2007) while 12 trillion naira will be required to finance the deficit. This is  about 4 times the annual budget of Nigeria (FHA, 2007). Housing is of supreme  importance to man and one of the best indicators of a person’s standard of  living and his place in society. However, at no point has it been adequately  supplied either quantitatively or qualitatively (Jiboye 2009; Omoniyi &  Jiboye, 2011). Over time, the need for adequate shelter has continued to attract  global attention especially in developing countries where the urbanization  process has been growing at an alarming rate. The phenomenal rise in  population, increase in number and size of most cities in the past decades have  led to acute shortage of adequate dwelling units in many urban centres globally  (Jiboye, 2009).
		    
Consequently, in recent time, the issue of  housing has formed part of the major discussion in several global summits such  as the 1992 Rio-de Janeiro summit on environment and development, the 1996  Habitat summit at Istanbul, the 2000 New York, United Nations Millennium  Development Goals (MDGS) summit, 2002 World Summit in Johannesburg and the 2005  La Havana, UN sustainable Cities Documentation of Experience Programme  (Oladunjoye, 2005; UN-Habitat, 2007; UNDPI, 2008).
		    
Nigeria,  like other developing countries is saddled with uncontrollable growth of the  urban population caused by lack of provision of infrastructural facilities and  poor economic conditions in the rural areas. The proportion of the Nigerian  population living in urban centres has increased phenomenally from 7% in the  1930s, 10% in 1950, 20% in 1970, 27% in 1980 to 35% in 1990
			  (Okupe, 2002). Over 40% of Nigerians now  live in urban centres of varying sizes. The incidence of this population in  urban centres has created severe housing problems, resulting in overcrowding in  inadequate dwellings, and in a situation in which 60% of Nigerians can be said  to be “houseless persons” (Federal Government of Nigeria, 2004).
		    
Besides  the incidence of overcrowding in the existing housing stock, rural-urban drift  has occasioned the sprouting of make shift dwellings or squatter settlements in  cities that are devoid of minimum structural and normative quality. Majority of  the houses are constructed with all sorts of refuse/second-hand materials in  illegally occupied self allocated land, they are badly maintained and lack the  basic necessities of life like sanitary facilities, light, air and privacy. As  evidenced by past researches in housing studies, most urban centres in the  country are characterized by high density buildings, acute sanitary problems,  pollution of air, surface water, noise and solid wastes (Filani, 1987, Agbola,  1998). According to Olotuah (2002) estimated 2.3 million urban dwelling units  are substandard, only 33% of urban houses can be considered to be physically  sound, and 44% and 19% require minor and major repairs respectively to bring  them to normative and structural quality. Despite all efforts of the government  at achieving sustained housing delivery to the common people, existing  realities indicate the goal is far from being achieved. It is against this  background that this research examines the major issues and challenges of  execution of public sector housing in Nigeria with a view to stimulating  relevant agencies of government and other stakeholders into designing  appropriate strategies for effective execution of public sector housing in  Nigeria. 
              
1.2   STATEMENT OF THE PROBLEM
			  In  many developing countries, including Nigeria, urban housing crisis is  escalating unabated despite a number of new policies, programs and strategies  being engaged in by public and private sectors aimed at execution of public sector housing in addressing this problem (Okupe,  2002). Since execution of public  sector housing is  principally carried out by government agencies and their collaborators, the researcher  argues that one vital step to addressing myriads of issues and challenges in execution of public sector housing in Nigeria is to identify areas of  weakness in public housing agencies and subsequently address such weakness for  enhanced productivity (Jiboye, 2009). It is for this reason that the study  investigated the contextual and organizational challenges related to execution of public sector housing in Nigeria in the post independence era. 
		    
This study attempted at using key organizational  components to assess areas of challenges in execution of public sector housing among government agencies in the study area. This is with a  view to assisting public-sector housing policy makers and program managers  chart future pathways for improved performance in public housing provision and  management in Nigeria. 
              
1.3   OBJECTIVES OF THE STUDY
		    The  general objective of this research is to analyze the issues and challenges in  the execution of public sector housing in  Nigeria while the following are the specific objectives:
- To examine the challenges of execution of public sector housing in Nigeria.
- To ascertain the factors causing housing challenges in Nigeria.
- To determine the solution to the issues of execution of public sector housing in Nigeria.
1.4 RESEARCH QUESTIONS
- What are the issues and challenges in execution of public sector housing in Nigeria?
- What are the factors causing housing challenges in Nigeria?
- What are the solutions to the issues of execution of public sector housing in Nigeria?
1.6   SIGNIFICANCE OF THE STUDY
			  The following are the  significance of this study:
- Outcome of this study will educate stakeholders in housing development and the general public on the issues and challenges of execution of public sector housing in Nigeria thereby making the study very useful as a guide to policy makers in government. This will however helped in better housing development policy adoption and implementation.
- This study will also assist public-sector housing policy makers and program managers to chart future pathways for improved performance in execution of public sector housing and management in Nigeria.
- This research will also serve as a resource base to other scholars and researchers interested in carrying out further research in this field subsequently, if applied, it will go to an extent to provide new explanation to the topic.
1.7   SCOPE/LIMITATIONS OF THE STUDY
			  This  study on issues and challenges in the execution of public sector housing project in Nigeria will cover the  major issues on poor housing development in Nigeria with a view to determine a  strategic framework for massive execution of public sector housing projects in  Nigeria.
  LIMITATION OF STUDY
  Financial constraint- Insufficient fund tends to impede the efficiency of the  researcher in sourcing for the relevant materials, literature or information  and in the process of data collection (internet, questionnaire and interview).
			  Time constraint- The researcher will  simultaneously engage in this study with other academic work. This consequently  will cut down on the time devoted for the research work.
  1.8   DEFINITION OF TERMS
			  Housing:  Buildings or structures that individuals and their family may live in that meet  certain federal regulations. Different housing situations vary for individuals  and may depend on age, family, and geographic location. For example, a recent  university graduate in an urban environment in the US may live in a rented  apartment whereas a middle-aged entrepreneur may live in a house with or  without a mortgage.
			  Public:  of or concerning the people as a whole.
			  Population:  all the inhabitants of a particular place.
			  Migration:  Movement of people to a new area or country in order to find  work or better living conditions: the extensive rural-to-urban migration has  created a severe housing problems.
REFERENCES 
              Agbola, S.B. (1998) The housing of Nigerians – A review of policy development  and implementation. Research Reports No. 14 Ibadan, Nigeria:  Development Policy Centre.
              Ebie, S.P.O.F.(2009, May). Public sector  driven housing; achievements and problems. Paper presented at the 2009 Faculty  of Environmental Sciences Annual lecture, Nnamdi Azikiwe University, Awka.
              Federal Government of Nigeria (2004) National Housing Policy  Draft, Abuja.
              Federal Republic of Nigeria (1999) Constitution 10
              Jiboye, A.D (2009). The challenges of  sustainable housing and urban development in Nigeria. Journal of Environmental  Research and Policies 4(3), 23-27
              Okupe, L (2002) Private sector initiative  in housing development in Nigeria – How feasible? Housing Today, 1(6), 21-26
              OladunJoye, A. O. (2005). Implementation of  the sustainable cities programme in Nigeria. Havana 2005 – Documentation of  experience SCP.LA21. Sustainable cities programme. Locating Agenda 21  Programme.
              Olotuoh, A.O. & Ajemifujah, A.O.  (2009). Architectural education and housing provision in Nigeria. CEBE  Transactions 6(1), 86-102. Retrieved from http://www.cebe.heacademy.ac.uk/transactions /pdf/ olotuahajemifujah6 (1) p.d.f.
              Omoniyi, S & Jiboye, A.D (2011).  Effective housing policy and sustainable development in Nigeria. International  Journal of Development Studies. 6(1), 129-135
              UN-Habitat, (2007) Milestones in the  Evolution of Human Settlement Policies. 1976-2006. State of the World Cities.  Report 2006/2007. The MDGS and Urban Sustainability. 30 years of Shaping the  Habitat Agenda. Earsthean
              United Nations Development of  Public Information (UNDPI) (2008). Achieving the Millennium Development Goals  in Africa. Recommendations of the MDG steering group. Retrieved from http://www.indgafrica.org.pdf.
