390 research outputs found

    The Government’s Housing Strategy is a step in the right direction, but the goal of constructing enough homes for the projected increase in households is slipping out of our grasp.

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    Last week saw the concomitant announcement of the government’s intention to build almost half a million new homes by 2015, and a 99 per cent drop in affordable housing construction. Christine Whitehead finds the government’s strategy to be an encouraging move but it is essentially lacking in efforts to source a long-term solution to the housing crisis.

    Fiscal policy instruments to promote affordable housing

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    From social housing to subsidised housing? accommodating low income households in Europe

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    There were three main models of social housing in post war Europe: state housing as part of the communist offer; social rented housing as a pillar of the welfare or corporate state; and (limited) support for self- provision and owner-occupation in more rural family based systems. Within the welfare state model there have been two distinct approaches: housing available to all and housing concentrated on accommodating lower income households. As incomes rose, numerical shortages were overcome, public expenditure cuts kicked in and there was political upheaval in many countries, models of social housing also changed –becoming more diverse within countries but increasingly similar across much of Europe. This article first tracks changes over the post war period to provide a backdrop for discussing how the ways that social sectors have been financed have changed and the relative role of supply and demand side subsidies. It then asks who is now living in social housing to address the question of whether social housing has now become a residual tenure as other more desirable options have become available or whether it still plays a positive and innovative role

    Housing as asset based welfare: A comment

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    This paper aims to provide a contribution to the debate about housing as asset based welfare begun in this journal in 2015. It suggests that there are strong reasons associated with life cycle earnings and consumption why owner-occupation can be a desirable option, especially for older households. However owner-occupation can be a high risk option for less well-off households while increasing both inequality across income groups and particularly through its impact on inter-generational income and wealth. Even so, housing inequalities, despite all the market failures associated with its provision and allocation, are more an outcome of broader economic fundamentals. Moreover housing policies can improve the lived experience for many. Policies should aim to provide a tenure neutral-taxation environment but also to reduce credit and other constraints to entering owner-occupation. At the same time there must be support for those with inadequate income to achieve acceptable housing standards

    The density debate: a personal view

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    Density is an emotive term – but what we mean by density when we start to sound off is often very different from how others are interpreting what we are saying. This is not because everyone else is stupid – but because it is a term with many facets and each of us brings baggage based on our own experience – both professional and personal – to how we understand it

    Financing affordable social housing in the UK; building on success?

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    Housing policy: a more coherent approach

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    Our current housing crisis has many facets. There are too few homes for everyone, those there are can be unaffordable, and intergeneration inequalities in housing costs and wealth are more pronounced that at any other time in the postwar era. Meanwhile home ownership is falling, while the insecure private rented sector has doubled in size since the turn of the century – and now accommodates almost 20% of households

    The election campaign must address the housing crisis

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    The Government’s housing policy has been focussed on building 300,000 new homes a year. That target hasn’t been reached, and even if it had been, it would still not be enough to address the current housing crisis. Christine Whitehead and Tony Crook argue that the new Government should adopt a more coherent housing policy that focuses not just on building more homes but making better use of the existing housing stock
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