
Windhoek is not building homes. It is building illusions.In a recent address to investors, the City of Windhoek, through its CEO Moses Matyayi, presented what it described as a N$2.7 billion “opportunity” in Namibia’s housing shortage.
This was not a policy blueprint. It was not even a plan. It was a repackaged crisis, offered to the private sector as a blank canvas for speculative profit.
The real crisis, however, lies not only in the numbers, some 300,000 housing units short nationally, but in the nature of the demand. Namibia’s housing problem is not simply a supply gap; it is an affordability chasm.
Those most in need cannot pay commercial rates, cannot access bank loans, and cannot afford even basic serviced plots. There is no viable return on investment at the base of the market, and yet this is precisely where the need is greatest.
Despite this, the City continues to frame a structural failure as a market waiting to be unlocked. It does not offer free land. It does not subsidise building inputs at scale. It does not underwrite loans or carry any meaningful risk.
What it offers is paperwork, bureaucracy, and a sales pitch. Investors are expected to finance infrastructure, absorb delays, navigate shifting zoning policies, and somehow extract returns from an income group largely absent from the City’s own formal records.
The City speaks of plans to service 12,000 erven, conflating land with housing, as if plots alone will house the working poor. It points to demand but ignores the fact that this demand is not solvent. It calls for policy reform but proposes none.
The contradictions are familiar: a local authority that wants capital without accountability, progress without redistribution, and transformation without cost.
There is no business model in a vacuum. Yet that is exactly what the City is offering, a fantasy of private sector salvation, absent the structural conditions necessary for delivery.
A credible housing policy would begin by acknowledging that the free market cannot solve this. It would treat land as a social asset, not a speculative commodity. It would require government-backed development finance, cross-subsidised models, and urban planning that encourages density over sprawl.
But such measures demand political courage, not empty showcases.
Windhoek has instead chosen theatre. Investors would be wise to see through the script.
*Briefly is a weekly column that’s opinionated and analytical. It sifts through the noise to make sense of the numbers, trends and headlines shaping business and the economy — with insight, wit and just enough scepticism to keep things interesting. The views expressed are not our own; we simply relay them as part of the conversation.