200 likes | 319 Views
Modelling Housing using spatial microsimulation. Presenter: Robert Tanton Position: Research Director, Social Inclusion and Small Area Modelling team Date: 31 July 2009. Format. Introduction to the Social Inclusion and Small Area Modelling (SISAM) team at NATSEM Evidence based policy
E N D
Modelling Housing using spatial microsimulation Presenter: Robert Tanton Position: Research Director, Social Inclusion and Small Area Modelling team Date: 31 July 2009
Format • Introduction to the Social Inclusion and Small Area Modelling (SISAM) team at NATSEM • Evidence based policy • Modelling Housing policy
Introduction to SISAM • New team formed this year • Concentrate on social inclusion and small area modelling (spatial microsimulation) • Robert Tanton – Research Director • Justine McNamara –Children and Families team • Research on housing, housing stress and homelessness under social inclusion • WWW.NATSEM.CANBERRA.EDU.AU/SISAM • Links to all papers, online maps, etc
Evidence based policy • The Government’s agenda for the APS • “Today I want to discuss seven elements of the Government’s vision for the future Australian public service: • 3) Developing evidence-based policy making processes as part of a robust culture of policy contestability” • (Kevin Rudd, Address to Heads of Agencies and Members of Senior Executive Service,30 April 2008)
Limits to evidence based policy • Part of a complex process • Also consider politics, public mood and opinions • … but policy modelling will give some idea as to cost of policies, who benefits, and can affect public mood and opinion • Evidence based policy? Or evidence informing policy? • Is policy based purely on evidence? Or should evidence inform policy?
Research informing policy • Sandra Nutley (Professor of Public Management, University of St Andrews): • “if research is used to inform policy, what works best is interactive and ongoing processes and relationships between policymakers and researchers” • At a practical level, round-tables or workshops are seen as a cost effective, safe haven way of sharing ideas, analyses or perspectives. • Meredith Edwards, “Research shouldn’t stop at a report”, The Public Sector Informant, p. 28
Models NATSEM has to study housing and the effects of policy change • HOUSEMOD • Developed with AHURI • Used for a number of analysis and policy modelling • Before and after housing poverty • Small area housing stress • Housing affordability and Commonwealth Rent Assistance • Small area projections of the demand for housing assistance • Developed further with ACT Land Development Agency • Projections module added – to 2020
What can HOUSEMOD do? • Small area: • Change in housing markets, eg, effect of changes in interest rates • Estimates of housing stress before and after policy change • Can model complex policies • Example: Trying to get people onto CRA rather than public housing • Increase amount received through CRA to encourage people to use CRA • increase public housing rent to encourage people off public housing • impact of policy change on other Centrelink benefits can be included
What can HOUSEMOD do? • Projections based on current policies or new policies • Annual out to 2017
Small area housing stress • Online maps – Housing Stress using the 30/40 rule • http://web.natsem.canberra.edu.au/maps/AUST_SMSM08/atlas.html • Analysis of a number of different measures of housing stress • 30 rule • 30/40 rule • 30/10-40 rule • Measuring housing stress at small area levels: How much do definitions matter?, Binod Nepal, Robert Tanton, Ann Harding and Justine McNamara
Examples of work done using HOUSEMOD • FAHCSIA – Estimates of housing stress • HIA – Effect on housing stress of interest rate increases • AHURI – Before and after housing poverty, Intergenerational sustainability of housing • St Vincent De Paul - How much would be required to put all low income renters out of housing stress? • $74 per household per week on average to put everyone out of housing stress
What can’t HOUSEMOD do? • Morning after effects only • Static microsimulation model – no behavioural impact • Eg, can look at effect on housing stress after interest rates increase, but cannot incorporate change in demand for housing because prices higher
What sort of policy options could be modelled? • Change in CRA (see above example) • Effect of interest rate changes on housing stress
What could be done • Introducing some behavioural model • Tenure choice • Improving projections module • Using method developed from other grants • Introducing Supply/Demand analysis • Link to macro model
Funding • Consultancies (see above – HIA, St Vincent De Paul, FAHCSIA, AHURI) • Short term use of the model – don’t provide funding for methodological developments unless required for consultancy • Linkage grants • Provide long term funding for methodological advances • Provide linkage partners with analysis using new methodological advances • Provide us with experts in each State to help develop and validate model and provide comments - collaboration
Future • Collaborations with States • Work with States to model different housing scenarios • Provide results in focus groups to talk through results • Linkage Grant • To introduce behavioural elements and conduct some policy analysis • Approx $30,000 per year commitment over 5 years • Funding matched by Commonwealth • Policy analysis agreed on by partners
Cost/Benefit analysis • How much does a policy with unintended consequences cost? • Making things much worse for low income families compared to high income families – was this intended? • Making thing worse for different areas – will rural areas be affected worse? Or inner city? Was this intended?
Questions/Comments/Discussion www.natsem.canberra.edu.au