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Families, inclusion and housing : A European perspective

Families, inclusion and housing : A European perspective Dr. Özgür Öner , Vice-President of CECODHAS Housing Europe Expert Meeting, 30 August 2013 (Berlin). What is CECODHAS - Housing Europe?. CECODHAS - Housing Europe is the federation of cooperative, public, social housing

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Families, inclusion and housing : A European perspective

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  1. Families, inclusion and housing : A European perspective Dr. Özgür Öner, Vice-President of CECODHAS Housing Europe Expert Meeting, 30 August 2013 (Berlin)

  2. What is CECODHAS - Housing Europe? CECODHAS - Housing Europe is the federation of cooperative, public, social housing … a network of national and regional housing federations of housing organisations. Together the 43 members in 18 European members States manage 25 million dwellings which represent 12% of the total housing stock in the EU.

  3. Some common trends in EU Unaffordability for the most vulnerable but also for middle-low income families Lack of supply Changes in housing benefit: putting affordability even further Future challenges to answer by adequate housing solutions: Climate change and the need to reduce carbon foot-print from the housing sector Ageing population and the adequate housing for elderly to live in their home A short overlook to housing situation in EU countries Specially impacts of the crisis

  4. 2 great challenges for families in the affordable housing sector : - growing poverty - ageing The EU holds part of the solution: - Cohesion Policy - Research and Development

  5. Housing conditions are already critical in some parts of the EU … % of the population affected by at least 1 housing deprivation factor, 2007, Eurostat Note: housing deprivation factors are: damp walls, leaking roof or rot in windows; no bath or shower in the dwelling; no indoor flushing toilet for the sole use of the household; dwelling too dark.Source: EUROSTAT; EU-SILC 2007.

  6. And social housing residents are getting poorer….

  7. 20 years of demand side policies: Impact of housing costs • Housing costs = 22.5% disposable income (41% at risk of poverty) • Housing overburden = 10.1% (37% at risk of poverty) • Housing-related expenditure = 22.9 % of total household consumption expenditure • A third of European households facing disproportionate housing costs, and perception of worsening affordability

  8. Development of ageing structure until 2060 (Germany)according to the 12th coordinated population forecastIndex values for chosen age classes, 2009=100 Index 2009=100 Popultation of age … until less than … years 2050 (Increasing until 2050) (Increasing until 2033) 2033 (Increasing until 2020) 2020 (Decreasing) (Decreasing) (Decreasing) Quelle: Statistisches Bundesamt, 12. koordinierte Bevölkerungsvorausberechnung; Variante 1-W1 Untergrenze mittlere Bevölkerung

  9. The silent revolution • the end of the three ages of life : following youth and adulthood, we see the development of new ages, new individual and family times, which signal the end of the traditional equation according to which old age = retirement = illness, infirmity and dependence. In today’s world, the 20 or 30 years of life that come after retirement cover at least three stages of old age: those aged from 65-75, the young and still active pensioners; those aged from 75-85, the age when a whole series of small infirmities begin to appear, although these people are still relatively autonomous; and finally the over 85s who are beginning to have to face up to dependency related issues • It is only possible to grow old “comfortably” if the housing policy is coordinated with other policies in order to ensure both a degree of fluidity between the three spaces of life – the public space, the collective space and the private space (home) – and also a form of solidarity and cohesion through networks of community based services

  10. The Cohesion Policy (Structural Funds) 2014-2020 For instance, in Germany the investment volume needed to adapt dwellings is of approximately 39 billion Euros. This investment is needed for measures to adapt the 2.5 million dwellings where elderly persons with mobility limitation are living (50% need structural changes inside, 50% accessibility improvement) Public finance is needed Structural Funds could and should invest in the adaptation of our living spaces to the demographic evolution and changing ways of living (ERDF used as grants and loans) Possibility : combining ageing adaptation and energy efficiency measures (see example in France with clear socio-economic benefits) Key role of local level (new instruments: Community Led Local Development and Integrated Territorial Investments)

  11. Research and Development – Horizon 2020 • The search for win-win solutions: there is an agreement among academics and practitioners that in most cases preventing measures (such as housing-led approaches for the most vulnerable ) are less expensive in terms of public health expenditure than treatment of a situation that has already occurred (such as stays in hospitals because of a lack of adaptation of the dwellings) (for instance: housing for former homeless and/or people with drug addiction problem in Notthingham) • The new EU research programme (Horizon 2020) can help explore solutions for families in need of greater social inclusion. Not only focus on innovation in personalised medicine, care systems and products without the necessary recognition of the contribution of labour-intensive solutions such as small repair of homes

  12. www.housingeurope.eu

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