Press Release
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Timothy Harwood
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Friday, April 29, 2005
OPIC Board Approves $46 Million for Housing Project in Zambia
WASHINGTON, D.C. – The board of directors of the Overseas Private Investment Corporation (OPIC) approved a $46.3 million loan for a housing development in Zambia that will leverage $80 million of new housing construction, generate 5,000 new homes and serve as a model for future housing projects in sub-Saharan Africa.
The project also represents significant progress toward fulfillment of the Bush Administration’s African Mortgage Market Initiative, established in July 2003 to encourage the development of mortgage markets in sub-Saharan Africa.
OPIC will provide the loan to Houses for Africa Mortgage Finance Zambia, to facilitate mortgage financing for 5,000 new homes to built in the Lilayi Housing Estate near Lusaka, the capital. The company is a joint venture between Nevada-based Houses for Africa Inc.; Pangaea Holdings LLC. of Wisconsin; and City Investments Ltd, a Lusaka, Zambia-based agricultural and real estate development company.
The Lilayi estate will provide electricity, water and sewage, telephone, trash removal and parking services, as well stations for bus and taxi services. It will also feature a separate commercial and retail area with banking services on site, a school, clinic, green areas for recreation and a police post. The target buyers of the houses will be salaried workers and self-employed persons.
The U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) will provide technical assistance in the enhancement of the title deeds registry system within the Zambian Ministry of Lands, which will ensure the timely delivery of certificates of mortgage and recording of mortgages.
OPIC Acting President and CEO Ross Connelly said the project would help Zambia address a critical housing shortage: the country’s population growth rate for 1990-2000 was 2.9 percent, but the rate of increase of housing was less than one percent of the annual requirement of 600,000 units for urban areas. In particular, the high population growth rate and migration have resulted in the mushrooming of squatter settlements on Lusaka’s periphery. Moreover, a recent study by USAID found that Zambia has virtually no retail mortgage market.
“Housing investment is a key component of economic development, both because housing is a basic social need and because private home ownership is often an important source of capital for entrepreneurship at the grass roots level. A fully functioning housing market, including clearly-defined titles to privately-owned property, is an important element in the construction of a dynamic market economy,” Connelly said. “That is why OPIC is confident the project can serve as a model for the development of the housing sector in other African countries.”
OPIC is the U.S. Government’s development finance institution. It mobilizes private capital to help solve critical development challenges and in doing so, advances U.S. foreign policy. Because OPIC works with the U.S. private sector, it helps U.S. businesses gain footholds in emerging markets catalyzing revenues, jobs and growth opportunities both at home and abroad. OPIC achieves its mission by providing investors with financing, guarantees, political risk insurance, and support for private equity investment funds.
Established as an agency of the U.S. Government in 1971, OPIC operates on a self-sustaining basis at no net cost to American taxpayers. OPIC services are available for new and expanding business enterprises in more than 150 countries worldwide. To date, OPIC has supported nearly $200 billion of investment in over 4,000 projects, generated $74 billion in U.S. exports and supported more than 275,000 American jobs.

