The Homeowner Ideology
Economic (F)Utility of Real Property Rights in Four African Cities
Abstract
While homeownership has clear benefits among the impoverished, The Homeowner Ideology shows that the utility of real property rights as an economic resource are severely limited in sub-Saharan African cities. Although global poverty has declined since 1990, it remains widespread in Subsahara, the region with the highest proportion of the global population living in slums. Mainstream thinking in development studies is dominated by market fundamentalist neoclassical economics and the premise that ownership reduces poverty. Singumbe Muyeba contends that this neoliberal premise is flawed and unsupported by data within the African context. Muyeba argues that property rights function as structured idle capital on the formal market in African cities and the persistence of homeownership as the intervention of choice is explained by the influence of neoliberal ideology, intergenerational transfer of homeownership culture within the family, and the state’s deliberate and active support for homeownership tenure.
Keywords
Homeownership, Ideology, Real property rights, Slums, Slum upgrading, Housing, Land tenure, Tenure security, Formalization of tenure, Property titling, Cities, Lusaka, Cape Town, Luanda, Nairobi, Africa, Economic institutions, Propensity score matching, Difference-in-Differences, Natural experimentsDOI
10.3998/mpub.14418455ISBN
9780472077328, 9780472057320, 9780472904938Publisher
University of Michigan PressPublisher website
https://www.press.umich.edu/Publication date and place
2025Series
African Perspectives,Classification
Politics and government
Central / national / federal government policies
Economic systems and structures