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Inquiry into housing policies and practices for precariously housed older Australians

Author

Listed:
  • Faulkner, Debbie
  • Sharam, Andrea
  • James, Amity
  • Tually, Selina
  • Barrie, Helen

Abstract

This final Inquiry brings together the findings of three research projects to address how Australia can deliver the types of housing precariously housed individuals in, or approaching, retirement need to support their life aspirations, wellbeing, participation and inclusion. Over the last 20 years, housing options for older Australians on lower incomes have been getting worse with home ownership rates falling, more people carrying their mortgage debt into retirement and reduced access to social housing. By 2031 an estimated 440,000 older households will be unable to find or afford suitable housing. Lower income older Australians want housing that is achievable, with some factors gaining greater significance as people get older, such as they want to stay in an affordable home and to live in safe, secure and neighbourhoods. The Inquiry developed and explored alternative housing models through a survey with lower income households. There was a clear preference for a shared equity home ownership model, a cooperative housing model and a transportable housing model, which reflects the expectation that it is ‘normal’ to own one’s home in Australia. In addition, the research highlights that, even though many low income older householders can’t afford any form of mortgage, some people are paying large proportions of their income on rent. If they could get a loan there are two options that have the potential to deliver forms of home ownership, with the security of tenure and well being that provides: shared equity mortgages and land lease mortgages. The research mapped the increases (and decreases) in populations of older low income households across Australia and predicted changes in each area to 2031, measured in suburb-sized geographical areas. The largest projected increases are likely to be in peri-urban and outer-suburban regions, with some significant rises in regional and rural locations.

Suggested Citation

  • Faulkner, Debbie & Sharam, Andrea & James, Amity & Tually, Selina & Barrie, Helen, 2023. "Inquiry into housing policies and practices for precariously housed older Australians," SocArXiv cuksd, Center for Open Science.
  • Handle: RePEc:osf:socarx:cuksd
    DOI: 10.31219/osf.io/cuksd
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    References listed on IDEAS

    as
    1. Randolph, Bill & Troy, Laurence & Milligan, Vivienne & van den Nouwelant, Ryan & Hayward, Richard Donald, 2018. "Paying for affordable housing in different market contexts," SocArXiv 38xu2, Center for Open Science.
    2. Bridge, Catherine & Zmudzki, Fredrick & Huang, Tracy & Owen, Ceridwen & Faulkner, Debbie, 2021. "Impacts of new and emerging assistive technologies for ageing and disabled housing," SocArXiv 43rvw, Center for Open Science.
    3. Val Colic-Peisker & Rachel Ong & Gavin Wood, 2015. "Asset poverty, precarious housing and ontological security in older age: an Australian case study," International Journal of Housing Policy, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 15(2), pages 167-186, April.
    4. Val Colic-Peisker & Rachel Ong & Gavin Wood, 2015. "Asset poverty, precarious housing and ontological security in older age: an Australian case study," International Journal of Housing Policy, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 15(2), pages 167-186, June.
    5. Sharam, Andrea & McNelis, Sean & Cho, Hyunbum & Logan, Callum & Burke, Terry & Rossini, Peter, 2021. "Towards an Australian social housing best practice asset management framework," SocArXiv 48a2r, Center for Open Science.
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