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Land, as vital as ever
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Top Stories |
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Taponeel Mukherjee | 23 Feb, 2019
The availability and usability of land to many investment sectors are
essential, and yet these are areas that do not get the attention they
deserve while making investment decisions and formulating policies. In
the Indian context, this issue assumes greater importance, given the
problems related to land that businesses and investors have faced in the
past. Regardless, some fundamental questions must be answered regarding
usability and relevant "land availability".
The first
question is whether land that is required for creating the appropriate
infrastructure or projects is available in the requisite size? It is
axiomatic that land sites must be available for such infrastructure to
be built upon.
The second question is whether land that is
available is relevant for the project under consideration? For instance,
in the case of data centre infrastructure, there is the need for land
parcels that are contiguous to each other, to create a large tract of
land that can be relevant for the project.
The third question is
whether the land that is available can be used to create an ecosystem
that will help deliver both financial and economic value from the assets
in question? In the case of the data centre infrastructure, this would
mean the land has access to the uninterrupted power or has alternate
arrangements for power procurement.
It is crucial to identify
land that meets all these three required conditions for India to fulfil
its ambition as a hub of global and domestic investments. A careful
analysis of the underlying conditions regarding land availability and
usability, as explained above, will help both investors and the
government accelerate the investment process.
Essential learnings
from past experience have a lot to teach us on how to improve and
expedite the investment process in India. For instance, India's mixed
experience with Special Economic Zones (SEZs) versus the much more
successful Chinese SEZ experience is in no small extent due to choices
regarding land site selection.
In the study "The Developmental
Effects of Special Economic Zones: Evidence from India's States", Meir
Alkon points towards the fact that site selection for some India SEZs
was driven by reasons other than business demand. The absence of
business demand, and, therefore, financial viability of the location of
the Indian SEZ was a significant factor in the issues that the SEZs
faced.
In the context of SEZs specifically, and more generally
regarding land acquisition, one must realise the value that "optimal
site selection" creates. The optimal site selection provides investment
returns to the investors, and additionally, it also allows for more
productive use of land. On the contrary, when site selection is poor,
not only do investments suffer, but the land is rendered useless since
it cannot be reverted to its original use, such as farming. Land for
prospective India SEZ use that becomes of no value due to incomplete or
non-functional projects is a case in point. Land selection is
also an issue that is relevant for the residential real estate segment, a
segment that has seen a protracted downturn in India over the last few
years. The basic questions around the availability, usability and
ecosystem linkage apply as much to residential real estate as to any
other sector.
One issue that has been a reason for the sector's
woes has been site selection in projects that fundamentally lack the
ecosystem linkages that would create a residential real estate asset of
value to the user at the correct price. Real estate sites with low
access to transportation from clusters of employment, probably one of
the significant drivers of real estate value in urban cities globally,
has led to incomplete projects, constrained balance sheets of real
estate companies and the consequent non-performing assets of banks.
Ironically,
the demand for urban housing is growing even as the residential real
estate supply glut builds up: it is indeed a classic case of market
failure driven by many factors with poor "land choices" being a
significant contributor.
Regardless of whether you are an equity
sponsor, project developer, lender or the government, factoring in the
fundamentals of the "micro-market" of land and the accompanying
requirements are essential for success. Gaps in investment ideas and
policies of the past provide us with both a template of pitfalls to
avoid and the significance of prudent decision-making frameworks on land
choices as we move ahead.
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