Affordable Land and Housing Europe and North America
Affordable Land and Housing Europe and North America
Affordable Land and Housing Europe and North America
Copyright United Nations Human Settlements Programme (UN-HABITAT), 2011 An electronic version of this publication is available for download from the UN-HABITAT web-site at http://www.unhabitat.org All rights reserved United Nations Human Settlements Programme (UN-HABITAT) P.O. Box 30030, GPO Nairobi 00100, Kenya Tel: +254 20 762 3120 Fax: +254 20 762 3477 Web: www.unhabitat.org DisclAimer The designations employed and the presentation of the material in this report do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever on the part of the United Nations Secretariat concerning the legal status of any country, territory, city or area or of its authorities, or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers or boundaries. Reference to names of firms and commercial products and processes does not imply their endorsement by the United Nations, and a failure to mention a particular firm, commercial product or process is not a sign of disapproval. Excerpts from the text may be reproduced without authorization, on condition that the source is indicated. HS Number: HS/074/11E ISBN Number (Series): 978-92-1-131938-5 ISBN Number (Volume): 978-92-1-132368-9 Design and Layout: Gideon Mureithi/UNON Printing: UNON, Publishing Services Section, Nairobi, ISO 14001:2004-certified.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
Principal Authors: Team Leader: Contributors: English Editors: Sasha Tsenkova and Matthew French Claudio Acioly Jr. Claudio Acioly Jr.,Mohamed El Sioufi, Christophe Lalande, Channe Oguzhan, Hugo Priemus, Koen Steemers and the University of Cambridge, Nigel Browne and the Institute for Housing and Urban Development Studies (IHS). Roman Rollnik and Matthew French
Volume 1:
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FOREWORD
The first four volumes in the Adequate Housing series respond to the urgent need for a global assessment of the state of land and housing. While countless studies, research projects, and reports have been undertaken on individual housing needs, projects, and programmes, no contemporary studies have compared and contrasted housing conditions, policies, and approaches on a regional or global scale. This series fills this gap. The four volumes focus on the land and housing situation in four regions facing considerable challenges and affordability problems: Latin America and the Caribbean, Asia, Africa, and Europe and North America. They present a comparative documentation of the historical trajectory, major contemporary trends, and best practices in land and housing provision in each region. Although the size and overall characteristics of the housing sector does vary markedly across these regions, and indeed their countries, common to all is the fact that obtaining and retaining housing that is adequate and affordable is a serious problem for a large proportion of the population. Unfortunately housing affordability remains a challenge and it is worsening due to, among other factors, the economic effects of the global financial crisis and the increasing severity of disasters and conflicts, which both place an additional strain on already stretched land and housing resources. This series and its messages and recommendations are therefore timely. These regional studies represent a significant step forward in investigating the state of the global housing challenge. A detailed examination and comparison of, as well as critical reflection on access to housing at the local, national and regional levels is the first and important step towards designing policies to improve access to affordable housing opportunities and to bring solutions to scale. This will help in preventing city expansion on the basis of informal land development and informal housing supply. The four volumes represent a significant body of research, documentation, and critical review that I believe will be of value to those involved in the housing sector. Dr. Joan Clos
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY vi KEY MESSAGES vii ABBREVIATIONS AND GLOSSARY xi LIST OF FIGURES xii LIST OF TABLES xiv LIST OF BOXES xiv 1 INTRODUCTION - AFFORDABLE LAND AND HOUSING IN THE REGIONAL CONTEXT 3 1.1 EUROPEAN AND NORTH AMERICAN COUNTRIES: DISPARITY AND SIMILARITY 1.2 A BRIEF HISTORICAL SNAPSHOT OF HOUSING POLICY AND PRACTICE TRENDS SINCE 1945 1.3 HOUSING AFFORDABILITY: ITS COMPONENTS AND MEASURES 1.4 STRUCTURE AND CONTENT OF THE VOLUME 2 THE STATE OF AFFORDABLE LAND AND HOUSING 5 8 12 14 19
2.1 QUANTITY, QUALITY, AND DISTRIBUTION OF EXISTING HOUSING STOCK 20 2.1.1 AVAILABILITY OF HOUSING 20 2.1.2 HOUSING DEFICIT AND SURPLUS 20 2.1.3 HOUSING QUALITY 22 2.2 AFFORDABILITY 27 2.2.1 HOUSING COSTS AND EXPENDITURE 29 2.2.2 HOUSE PRICE DYNAMICS 30 2.3 TENURE MODALITIES 31 2.4 SUBSTANDARD HOUSING AND INFORMAL SETTLEMENTS 38 3 ADDRESSING THE CHALLENGE: AFFORDABLE LAND AND HOUSING DELIVERY TRENDS AND PATTERNS 45
3.1 NEW HOUSING CONSTRUCTION 46 3.2 FINANCING MECHANISMS, SUBSIDY REGIMES AND AFFORDABILITY CONSTRAINTS 47 3.3 HOUSING DISPARITIES: HOMELESSNESS, GENDER INEQUITY, REFUGEES AND IDPS 51 3.4 PROVISION OF SOCIAL HOUSING 56 3.5 LAND SHORTAGES FOR AFFORDABLE HOUSING 58
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
3.6 REHABILITATION AND MANAGEMENT OF PRIVATISED MULTI-HOUSEHOLD HOUSING IN EASTERN EUROPE 62 3.7 PROVISION OF AFFORDABLE HOUSING THROUGH URBAN REGENERATION 65 4 NOTABLE TRENDS, RECOMMENDATIONS AND CONCLUSIONS 71
4.1 HOUSING SYSTEMS AND HOUSING CONDITIONS 72 4.2 MAJOR CHALLENGES AND HOUSING POLICY RESPONSES 73 4.3 RECOMMENDATIONS 74 4.4 CONCLUSION 77 5 REFERENCES 81
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
Compared with the regions of Asia, Africa, and Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC), countries in Europe and North America present distinctive challenges for affordable land and housing provision. Many European and North American countries have a long history and considerable experience of affordable social housing provision. Land and housing finance mechanisms are relatively well developed. Many of these countries are distinctly urban and urbanization rates are some of the lowest in the world. Population growth rates have peaked and most cities and countries are expected to have low growth in the coming decades. In many countries there is no sizeable housing deficit per se and the proportion of informal, un-serviced slums is small, if not zero in some European and North American countries. Affordable land and housing problems in Europe and North America stem from dimensions of affordability that are less prevalent in Africa and Asia. Rising socio-economic inequalities are gentrifying and dividing cites and making housing increasingly unaffordable for low- and middle-income households. A near unanimous belief in homeownership has marginalised rental housing, and as a result drastically reduced rental housing stock, which is a vital tenure option for many households. Governments in these countries have largely retreated from providing social housing in favour of enabling the market, yet the market has not provided land and housing that is affordable to low-income households. There has been a general shift from property subsidies to subject subsidies. The housing stock in most Eastern European countries is comprised of low-cost multi-storied apartment blocks, built between the late-1950s and early-1980s, which are extensively deteriorated and poorly managed. While households have ownership of such units, many households cannot afford the ongoing service and maintenance expenses. Left unaddressed these dimensions of housing affordability pose a serious problem for European and North American countries. This report therefore provides an overview of progress achieved in the provision of affordable housing in the countries that comprise the United Nations Economic Commission for Europe (UNECE). Given the immense diversity of responses across these 56 countries, the emphasis is on practices that are conducive to the provision of affordable land and housing. The report has three principal objectives. Firstly, it explores major regional trends in housing conditions with an emphasis on availability, quality, and tenure choice. Secondly, it analyses housing policy responses that address major challenges such as growing affordability problems, access to social housing and improvement of substandard housing conditions. Thirdly, the report provides recommendations for local, national and international policy initiatives that could contribute to the provision of affordable housing in the region.
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Executive Summary
KEY MESSAGES
Compared with Asia, Africa, and Latin America and the Caribbean, European and North American countries have distinctive land and housing challenges
Compared with those in Asia, Africa, and Latin America and the Caribbean, the housing sectors in European and North American countries function relatively well and many European and North American countries have a considerable experience of affordable social housing. Urbanization and population growth will remain relatively low in the coming decades placing only moderate demand on new land and housing provision. In most European and North American countries there is no sizeable housing deficit per se and the proportion of informal un-serviced slums is very low. Nevertheless, rising socio-economic inequalities are gentrifying and dividing European and North American cites and making adequate housing increasingly unaffordable for low- and middleincome households. A near unanimous belief in homeownership has drastically reduced rental housing stock which is a vital tenure option for many households. Many households in Eastern Europe live in deteriorated and poorly managed multi-storied apartment blocks and cannot afford the ongoing service and maintenance expenses. Governments in European and North American countries have largely retreated from providing social housing in favour of enabling the market, yet the market has not provided land and housing that is affordable to low-income households.
Land and housing affordability remains the fastest growing and most pervasive housing sector challenge in European and North American countries
Housing costs have increased with significant implications for access to adequate and affordable housing, particularly for vulnerable groups. For instance, in four countriesBelgium, Spain, Portugal and Greecea quarter of the households have significant financial difficulties due to housing costs; in Italy this share is 42 per cent. While the data are limited, it appears that countries with higher homeownership rates and limited tenure choice tend to have a higher share of households experiencing affordability problems. Furthermore, the situation appears to be more problematic in urban areas where higher prices for housing and concentration of poverty create cumulative disadvantages. The current estimate of the homeless population in Europe is close to 600,000 with more than 60,000 people sleeping rough and another 400,000 in homeless shelters. Asylum seekers are another disadvantaged group who account for over 105,000 in temporary shelters. Although the evidence for Central and Eastern Europe (CEE) countries suggests that homelessness is less significant in quantitative terms, several countries appear to have a growing number of homeless people and rising demand for overnight shelters, for example Poland and Hungary. In the United States, in 2006 more than 750,000 people were reported to be homeless. In the majority of European and North American countries, internal displacement continues to be a major problem directly related to housing. In the Balkans, the Caucasus, Turkey and Cyprus the number of internally displaced persons (IDPs) stands at 2.8 million. Serbia and Montenegro still host the largest number of refugees and IDPs in Europe, most of them living in substandard or informal housing.
Homelessness across European and North American countries is a serious challenge and a sign of major failure of governments to ensure affordable housing for all
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The availability and quality of housing is relatively high, although there are significant intracountry disparities
Housing conditions in most European and North American countries have improved in the last decade. The general ratio of dwellings per thousand inhabitantsa crude indicator of the adequacy of housing provisionvaries, with Finland and France having the highest number with over 500 units per 1,000 residents. Transition countries in Eastern Europe have slightly lower levels with Albania (254/1000) and Poland (314/1000) having the lowest. Housing shortages across most countries in the region are often associated with particular housing types, locations and qualities rather than with the absolute shortage of housing in general; second homes and vacation homes play a larger role in European and North American countries than other regions. In some countries, particularly in CEE there is a housing surplus, for example ranging from 786,000 units in Romania to 58,000 in Albania. Access to water and adequate sanitation in Europe and North America is one of the highest in the world standing at 94 per cent on average for water and 93 per cent for sewer. Correspondingly, the share of housing serviced with piped water and sewer is reportedly much higher than in other global regions. However, the situation with Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) countries is particularly problematic. For instance, only one-third of the housing stock in Moldova and Uzbekistan is served by potable water and only a limited share of the housing stock has bath/showerfor instance Uzbekistan (13 per cent), Bosnia and Herzegovina (22 per cent) and Kyrgyzstan (24 per cent). Although urban areas reportedly have higher levels of service, close to 3 million people in European cities lack access to piped water and 8 million to sewer. Furthermore, in countries in transition, high connection rates do not necessarily mean good quality of services. Estimates by UN-HABITAT indicate that about 10 per cent of the urban population lives in slum conditions without access to basic services and/or in overcrowded dwellings. In many Eastern countries the proportion of urban population living in slums is considerable, for example in Kazakhstan and neighbouring countries more than half of the urban population lives in slums. Elsewhere these rates are 30 per cent for Moldova and 19 per cent in Romania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia and Macedonia. Informal settlements have grown rapidly, particularly in the peri-urban areas of Albania, Serbia, Georgia and Azerbaijan which have become home to millions of new residents.
Access to water and adequate sanitation in Europe and North America is one of the highest in the world, although provision in many Eastern European countries is considerably lower
Approximately ten per cent of the population lives in slums and informal settlements. In many Eastern and Transition countries this percentage is higher with informal settlements constituting a major housing problem
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KEY MESSAGES
A near unanimous belief in homeownership has marginalised rental housing and as a result the rental housing stock has been drastically reduced.
Homeownership has grown steadily in most European and North American countries, particularly in those in transition. In most of the CEE and CIS countries, owner occupation exceeds 90 per cent, which is well above the 65 per cent average in Western Europe. In fact, some of the poorest countries in the region have the highest rates of homeownership. Analysis of house price dynamics indicates that access to owner occupation has become more expensive, even if it might lead to significant financial benefits over the long term. Tenure choices are much broader in Finland, Sweden, Austria and Denmark due to a balanced tenure structure offering a ladder of opportunities ranging from social to private renting to homeownership. In contrast, rental housing options are severely curtailed in several European countries, for instance Spain, Greece and Italy. The management and rehabilitation of high-rise multi-household housing is potentially one of the largest problems facing municipalities in Eastern European countries in transition. The rapid and widespread privatisation since 1989 was not supported by adequate post-sale communal management and maintenance procedures. Consequently, buildings have significantly deteriorated and the failure to carry out repairs will result in massive structural problems in more than 40 per cent of the urban housing stock. Recently, most countries have introduced laws to regulate the operation of homeowners associations, but the implementation has been very slow and inadequate. The management of privatised multi-household housing faces three major challenges: organisational, social and financial. These need to be systematically addressed alongside efforts to improve the operational energy efficiency of this housing typology, which can benefit occupant health, reduce national energy demand and occupant housing-related expenditure. The irreversible trend of urbanization has affected housing affordability through placing significant pressure on land availability and prices. Land for new affordable housing construction is becoming increasingly difficult to obtain. Land for housing is mostly provided through the market with a variety of long-term urban planning strategies in place to ensure land supply for new housing. Many regions, however, especially high growth regions, need coordinated planning by all levels of government in cooperation with civil society and commercial interests to respond to a deepening shortage of land for affordable housing. A number of regional and local governments have experimented with density bonusing, inclusionary zoning, land trusts and land lease arrangements to increase the availability of land supply for affordable housing.
The quality, energyefficiency and management of high-rise multihousehold housing in Eastern European countries requires urgent attention
While in the majority of European and North American countries land is available, there is a shortage of obtainable and reasonably priced land for affordable housing
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Subsidy regimes either do not benefit low-income households or are inadequate in scale to meet demand
Under subsidy regimes, subsidies focus on owner-occupation. Mortgage interest tax relief exists in Ireland, the Netherlands, the United States (US), the United Kingdom and Spain. France offers subsidies on savings schemes for many newly-built and renovated properties and provides a quarter of a million zerointerest rate mortgages annually. Housing subsidies and tax breaks are common in Austria, Germany, Russia, Croatia, the Czech Republic, Hungary and Poland. The new subsidy schemes in CEE have been criticised for being particularly inefficient in targeting households in need and in supporting the most affluent housing consumers. Meanwhile, demand-based subsidies to lowincome renters have failed to keep pace with the rising housing costs. In most transition countries, however, such assistance is non-existent and where it has been launched it is inadequate, for example the Czech Republic, Poland, Romania, Estonia and Latvia. There is a need to reduce fiscal support (which mainly reach high-income households, stimulate over-consumption and push prices up) and increase the adoption of income-related housing allowances. While affordability constraints are growing, less social housing is being provided for low-income households. In Canada and the United States a handful of local governments have had the political will to overcome some of the barriers to the development of affordable housing. The prospects, however, for a meaningful reduction in the number of households with growing affordability problems are dismal. In Western Europe, the data suggest that in countries where the sector is significant, there is a loose commitment to maintain adequate supply. Austria (30 per cent), Denmark (21 per cent) and Sweden (16 per cent) have the highest rates of new social housing production, followed by Finland, the UK and the Netherlands with rates in the range of 12 per cent. Several transition countries (Poland, the Czech Republic and Slovakia) have initiated new social housing programs in recognition of their importance for many groups in society. A number of countries in the region are addressing the provision of affordable and adequate housing through area-based urban renewal and regeneration programs. Local governments, working in partnership with non-profit housing providers and community groups, have experimented with inner city regeneration, brownfield, and waterfront redevelopment schemes. The search for effective strategies for urban regeneration to create a social mix, increase the supply of affordable housing and facilitate investment and improvement of existing infrastructure has promoted new models and a new repertoire of planning instruments to encourage with social inclusion.
There is a limited provision of social housing and although housing is increasingly unaffordable, rates of new social housing provision in most are European and North American countries are not increasing or are insufficient to meet demand In many Western European and North American cities the provision of affordable housing is being accomplished as part of ambitious urban regeneration projects
KEY MESSAGES
ACRONYMS
CAD CEB CEE CIS CMHC ECE EU GDP IDP IFC JCHS JESSICA LAC MoIIR RICS SEE UK UN UNECE UN-HABITAT USA USD ZhEKs Canadian Dollar Council of Europe Bank Central and Eastern Europe Commonwealth of Independent States Canadian Housing and Mortgage Corporation Eastern and Central Europe European Union Gross Domestic Product Internally/Internationally Displaced Person International Finance Corporation Joint Center for Housing Studies of Harvard University Joint European Support for Sustainable Investment in City Areas Latin America and the Caribbean Ministry of Infrastructure of the Italian Republic and Federcasa Royal Institute of Chartered Surveyors (UK) South-Eastern Europe United Kingdom United Nations United Nations Economic Commission for Europe United Nations Human Settlements Programme United States of America United Stated Dollar Housing and Communal Services Department, Azerbaijan
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LIST OF FIGURES
Figure 1: Figure 2: Figure 3: Figure 4: Figure 5: Figure 6: Figure 7: Figure 8: Figure 9: Figure 10: Figure 11: Figure 13: Figure 14: Figure 15: Figure 16: Figure 17: Figure 18: Figure 19: Figure 20: Figure 21: Figure 22: Figure 23: Figure 24: Figure 25: Figure 26: Figure 27: The housing landscape of Istanbul, Turkey 3 Map of European and North American countries (UNECE countries) included in this volume 5 Regional percentage of the population living in urban areas and urbanization growth projections for 2010-2015 5 The dense historic urban form of Florence, Italy 7 Derelict unused accommodation in Dublin, Ireland 10 Basic components of housing affordability 11 Multi-storied housing dominates the housing stock in Malta 17 Apartments in Marseille, France 19 A housing block in Warsaw, Poland 21 Housing vacancy rates in selected European and North American countries 22 Second homes and tourism houses, which are not used for permanent habitation, are a very important element of the European housing markets, for example in Paros, Greece 25 Public social housing in Minsk, Belarus Deteriorated multi-household housing in Bulgaria Housing-related expenditure in select European and North American countries in 2004 27 Households experiencing financial difficulties in select countries due to housing costs 28 New housing construction in the United States 28 Rent inflation in Europe and North America 31 Home ownership trends in European and North American countries in 2004 32 Brussels, Beligum, a city with a range of housing tenure options 33 Occupant additions and modifications to multi-household housing in Tajikistan 37 Renovation and extension of housing in Berlin, Germany 40 The regular yet incrementally-developed form of residential areas in Athens, Greece 42 Partly-refurbished panel housing in Czech Republic 43 New housing development in Tajikistan 45 Rates of new dwelling construction (per 1000 people) in South-Eastern Europe 47 New housing units in Washington D.C, 2009 48 25 26 26
Figure 12: Dwellings serviced by water and sewer in select countries in 2002
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ACRONYMS
Figure 28: Figure 29: Figure 30: Figure 31: Figure 32: Figure 33: Figure 34: Figure 35: Figure 36: Figure 37: Figure 38: Figure 39: Figure 40: Figure 41:
New housing schemes in Minsk, Belarus 49 Mortgage lending as a share of GDP in selected European and North American countries, 2009 51 Inward and outward remittance flows in developing countries according to region, 2007 52 Refugees, displaced people, and lower-income groups are all too often forced into homelessness and street-sleeping due to the unaffordability of urban housing, which is not acceptable for civil society - for example the social movement 'les Enfants de Don Quichotte' in Canal Saint Martin, Paris 54 Social housing: Existing stock and tenant support, 2004 57 Existing social housing stock and rates of new construction in selected European and North American countries, 2004 60 Terrace housing in Amsterdam, the Netherlands 62 Housing undergoing rehabilitation as part of the Czech Republic upgrading programme 63 Service costs versus housing maintenance costs in Chisinau, 1995-2005 65 The London 2012 Olympics site is characteristic of area-based urban renewal approaches where housing is developed on a large scale in conjunction with residential, commercial, retail and entertainment facilities 69 Much of the contemporary housing stock in the UK is comprised of Victorian low-rise brick terrace housing which is predominately either private rental or owner-occupied 70 Well maintained multi-household housing in Salzburg, Austria 74 Variation within a typology: Row houses in Oslo, Norway 78 Medium-rise multi-houehold housing comprises much of the residential fabric of Spanish cities, such as this example from Madrid 79 80
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LIST OF TABLES
Table 1: Measuring housing affordability 13 Table 2: Dwellings with basic services 23 Table 3: Housing tenure change, 1990 to 2004 35 Table 4: Refugees and displaced persons in Europe and North America 55
LIST OF BOXES
Box 1: Box 2: Box 3: Box 4: Box 5: Box 6: Box 7: Box 8: Box 9: Box 10: Box 11: Affordability constraints and the housing crisis in the United States Housing inequalities: Renters net worth declines Housing exclusion: the case of Roma communities The housing crisis of refugees and displaced people in Azerbaijan Council of Europe Bank: Social housing projects Social rental housing in the Netherlands: Dutch Housing Associations Vancouvers strategy to provide land for social housing Multi-household housing in Azerbaijan Housing rehabilitation programs in the Czech Republic Dutch urban regeneration: an emphasis on deprived neighbourhoods Viennas Urban Renewal Program 29 30 36 54 58 59 61 63 66 67 68
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LIST OF FIGURES
This volume provides an overview of the state of affordable land and housing in Europe and North America, countries that comprise the United Nations Economic Commission for Europe (UNECE).
2 2
PART ONE
1
PART one Introduction affordable LAND AND housing in the regional context
Figure 1: The housing landscape of Istanbul, Turkey. UN-HABITAT/Matthew French
AFFORDABLE LAND HOUSING and HOUSING IN EUROPE IN Asia AND NORTH AMERICA
countries of the global south but also European and North American countries. Volume focus and objectives This volume therefore focuses on housing conditions and policy responses to major housing challenges in the 56 European and North American countries of the UNECE (Figure 2). Given the immense diversity of housing responses the emphasis is on practices that are conducive to the provision of affordable land and housing. The volume has three principal objectives. Firstly, it explores major regional trends in housing conditions with an emphasis on availability, quality and tenure choice of housing in different housing systems. Secondly, it analyses housing policy responses to address major challenges such as growing affordability problems, access to social housing and improvement of substandard housing conditions. Particular emphasis is given to the urban dimension of affordability in the context of economic, social and political change. Thirdly, the volume provides some recommendations for local, national and international policy initiatives that could contribute to the provision of affordable housing. As will be shown in Section 1.4, the historic trajectory of housing supply and consumption since 1945 varies considerably between countries. Their historic experiences largely configure contemporary housing conditions and access, yet, as will now be shown, so too does the rapid urban, social, and economic transformations that
Figure 2: Map of European and North American countries (UNECE countries) included in this volume
PART ONE
have categorised European and North American countries in the last decade.
region are mostly under 3 million with medium densities, and stable or low-growth population (growth rates under 1 per cent). Annual urban growth rates in Italy, Portugal and Turkey are comparable to those in the United States and Canada, between 1.1 and 1.4 per cent. However, the projected annual urban growth is higher than 2 per cent in less urbanized countries such as Albania, Azerbaijan, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan. Such high levels of urbanization create significant challenges for the provision of affordable housing in large cities. Despite the notable economic success of major urban centres in European and North American countries, globalisation has exacerbated social polarisation and urban poverty. In the countries in transition, the reforms from centrally planned to market-based economies have added another layer of complexity. In many of these places the decline in living conditions is accompanied by rapid deterioration of existing housing, homelessness, and formation of informal settlements in peri-urban areas.1 The urban poor are especially vulnerable to economic shocks. They often lack access to services, safety nets and political representation. Cumulative disadvantages, often defined along the lines of gender, age, and ethnicity, create widening social differences between social groups, with lowincome, single-parent or women-led households the worst affected by limited options to secure adequate and affordable housing.
Figure 3: Regional percentage of the population living in urban areas and urbanization growth projections for 2010-2015. Source: UN-HABITAT, 2009
COMPARED WITH OTHER REGIONS, EUROPEAN AND NORTH AMERICAN COUNTRIES ARE OVERWHELMINGLY URBANIZED, WITH MORE THAN 75 PER CENT OF THE POPULATION CONCENTRATED IN URBAN AREAS. SUCH HIGH LEVELS OF URBANIZATION CREATE SIGNIFICANT CHALLENGES FOR THE PROVISION OF AFFORDABLE HOUSING IN CITIES.
In addition to housing challenges associated with urbanization and poverty, many countries are affected by war or civil conflicts. Almost 7 million have become refugees or are internally displaced (IDPs). Military conflict and violence in the Balkans and Northern Caucasus has caused long-term stress for the housing systems of these countries. As a result of conflicts in Bosnia and Herzegovina displaced people are estimated to be 2.5 million and in Serbia and 1 million in Montenegro alone. In the economic realm, countries with traditional market economies have experienced strong economic growth and major progress in their structural reform agenda in the past decade. The growth trajectory has been uneven but it has delivered better living standards in Western Europe, North America and some of the Central European countries. The benefits of regional economic growth, however, have not been shared widely. Income polarisation has increased, perhaps more dramatically in countries in transition, and unemployment has remained high. In Portugal
the income of the top 20 per cent is 7 times higher than the income of the bottom 20 per cent. Likewise, in Spain, Greece and Estonia, the income of the top quintile is 6 times higher than the income of the bottom quintile. In contrast, this ratio is only 1 to 3 in Slovenia, Sweden and Denmark.2 This is a major source of social inequality, which paralleled with unemployment creates major challenges for social cohesion and access to housing and basic services for lowincome households. Differences in economic growth and unemployment rates among countries have become more pronounced due to different structural adjustment policies.3 These policies and their associated economic restructuring have created significant challenges for particular groups such as the long-term unemployed, low-skilled workers and young people with limited work experience.4 The variable economic performance across Europe and North America affects the housing demand and interest rates but is perhaps most visible in the varying level of new housing provision in respective European and North American countries. Population growth in the region has remained modest less than 0.5 per cent in Western Europe and 3 per cent in North America, mostly attributed to immigration. Many countries in transition have experienced years of negative population growth, a result of emigration, lower reproduction rates, and responses to economic hardship. While demographic changes are relatively modest across Europe and North America, poverty has increased. The reality is that over 74 million people in the European Union were at risk of poverty in 2005, with one in six people experiencing poverty.5 Groups at risk are the long-term unemployed, large or one-parent families, people with a low level of education; and increasingly ethnic minorities and Roma communities. Some of the common drivers are unemployment or jobless growth, but also regional inequalities and inadequacy of the social protection systems.6, 7 The dimensions of poverty in CIS are quite different. The sub-region accounts for the largest share of people living in absolute poverty. While at
PART ONE
the start of the reform process poverty in countries in transition did not exist, in the present sense of the concept, today more than 100 million people are now classified as poor.8 The share of people living on less than 1 USD per day is alarmingly high in the Republic of Moldova (22 per cent), Uzbekistan (21 per cent) and Armenia (12 per cent). The move towards a market economy and democracy has failed to deliver balanced benefits to all countries in transition and/or to all social groups. It is widely acknowledged that the second generation of policy reforms is driven by a more sober reflection that market failures need to be addressed more efficiently and that the social protection of vulnerable groups is perhaps the most important aspect of public policy intervention.9 The contemporary challenge of affordable land and housing provision There is considerable contemporary divergence in housing patterns, typologies, and conditions in European and North American countries. Broadly speaking, housing quality and availability in longstanding European Union (EU) Western European member countries is higher than conditions in Central and Eastern European countries.10 Yet such simplified statements ignore the specificities and contradictions that prevail, which this volume explores. Unlike countries in Africa and Asia, many European and North American countries have no sizeable housing deficit per se and their
proportion of informal, un-serviced slums is relatively small. Many European and North American countries have a long history and considerable experience of affordable social housing provision and their land and housing finance mechanisms are relatively well developed which facilitates and widens access to housing. As demonstrated above, compared with most Asian and African countries, projected urban and population growth in European and North American countries is low, and European and North American countries are predominantly urban. Affordable land and housing problems in Europe and North America stem from dimensions of affordability that are less prevalent in Africa, Asia and LAC. Rising socio-economic inequalities are gentrifying and dividing UNECE cites and making housing increasingly unaffordable for low- and middle-income households. In SouthEastern Europe housing costs have increased significantly over the last two decades.11 Western European cities in particular are suffering from increasing homelessness as vulnerable groups are financially excluded from home ownership and rental markets.12 The sub-prime financial crisis that originated in the housing markets of the United States in 2008 has had severe repercussions on housing affordability both within North America and across the globe. The transition to a market economy in postSoviet countries has placed enormous pressure
Figure 4: The dense historic urban form of Florence, Italy. Photo UN-HABITAT/Matthew French
on households to obtain, retain and maintain an adequate and affordable housing unit in the face of increasing housing-related service costs.13 The removal of government subsidies, the lack of commercial housing finance, the lack of new housing construction, the increase in construction costs, the lack of rental housing and the almost complete retraction of government involvement in the housing sector are some of the many factors that configure the lack of housing affordability in Eastern European countries. The housing stock in most Eastern European countries is comprised of low-cost multi-storied apartment blocks, built between the late1950s and early-1980s, which are extensively deteriorated and poorly managed. Such high-rise panel housing accounts for upwards of 25 per cent of housing in large cities, and even more in former industrial cities. The issue, therefore, is not one of a housing shortage but of insufficient maintenance where the adequacy, in terms of quality of housing and housing services is a problem. A nearly unanimous belief in homeownership has marginalised rental housing and as a result drastically reduced rental housing stock, even though this modality is a vital tenure option for many households.14 This is especially the case in Eastern Europe where home ownership rates are well above those in Western Europe and where there is little government social housing. Governments in European and North American countries have largely retreated from providing social housing in favour of enabling the market, yet the market has not provided land and housing that is affordable to all. Recent trends suggest that governments are taking a more active role in addressing the housing sector, in particular in supporting the production of social housing. For example, Poland recently launched a social housing programme alongside supporting non-profit organisations to provide housing for middle-income households. Likewise, in the Czech Republic a programme was launched in 2003 to provide subsidies for construction of new flats that are produced and supported by local municipalities. In many European and North American countries urban land management and use is inefficient and is not available for affordable housing at
a scale that is required due to inappropriate regulations and zoning, private interests to maximise profits, and in many cases a lack of political will at municipal levels of government to support affordable housing provision. As will be shown, however, several Western European cities are demonstrating the opportunities for urban renewal and environmental rehabilitation projects where housing for households on lowincomes can be accommodated. Such projects are an example to Eastern and Southern Europe for how to maximise urban land utilisation, improve public spaces and transport, and develop inclusive cities with affordable housing provision as a key component.15 Although there is some evidence of affordable housing provision in European and North American countries, the dimensions outlined above combine to produce the challenge that this volume addresses: Adequate land and housing is becoming increasingly unaffordable for a vast proportion of the population in European and North American countries. Left unaddressed these dimensions of housing affordability pose a serious problem for these countries.16 The dimensions, however, have a history. They are the product of changing economic, political and social characteristics of national and international housing sector development. Therefore, before exploring affordability issues in greater depth, it is important to situate contemporary UNECE housing affordability dimensions within the regional historic context.
1.2
A BRIEF HISTORICAL SNAPSHOT OF HOUSING POLICY AND PRACTICE TRENDS SINCE 1945
In order to understand the contemporary situation of affordable land and housing in European and North American countries, it is important to be aware of the historical development of housing policy and practice. This section, therefore, provides a broad but brief overview of housing in the region since 1945, focusing primarily on Western and Eastern Europe.17 After World War Two (WWII) Western European governments played a fundamental role in shaping housing production. It was a radical departure from pre-WWII approaches
PART ONE
where governments had only a nominal role in housing provision, and during the war when housing production was negligible. The period from 1945 until the early 1960s is considered the recovery phase.18 The focus was on repairing wardamaged areas and alleviating the severe housing shortages. The dominant housing typology was large scale social housing, which was heavily subsidised, directed from public resources and motivated by the need for large quantities of housing at low-cost. For the decades following WWII, Eastern European housing was also typified by centrally administered government housing provision and control. While there certainly were differences between countries, they can be broadly seen to be part of the East European Housing Model.19 Housing was viewed as a social right that was to be guaranteed by the government. It was not a commodity with economic dimensions but rather a social service and consequently, housing production, allocation and consumption was under direct control by governments. Eastern European housing was low-rise, twoto three-storey wood and brick houses until the mid-1950s when high-rise housing blocks became the increasingly dominant housing typology. This change paralleled the move to high-rise housing forms in Western Europe and North America, which responded to new construction technologies and systems. Industrial technologies, notably prefabrication and pre-cast concrete components, facilitated housing on a larger scale while at the same time-it was arguedthey reduced construction cost and time. Indeed between 1956 and 1960 housing production roughly doubled from the previous five years,20 although, overall, housing remained costly, of low quality, and did not eliminate housing shortages.21 During the 1960s and early-1970s direct largescale public housing provision was at its peak in most Western European countries. Housing supply had been significantly increased largely through high-rise housing developments. A large proportion of the housing stock was rental housing, often public, subsidised social rental housing managed by municipalities and local councils.22 As a tenure modality, public rental
THE TRANSITION TO A MARKET ECONOMY IN POST-SOVIET COUNTRIES HAS PLACED ENORMOUS PRESSURE ON HOUSEHOLDS TO OBTAIN, RETAIN, AND MAINTAIN AN ADEQUATE AND AFFORDABLE HOUSING UNIT IN THE FACE OF INCREASING HOUSING-RELATED SERVICE COSTS.
housing thrived until the mid-1970s in the UK and into the 1980s in Sweden. By the mid- to late-1970s, however, the debate surrounding the benefits and disadvantages of rental versus homeownership intensified. During the early-1980s a paradigm shift occurred in the Western European housing sector. The economic and social context was changing and the role of the government in direct housing provision was increasingly questioned. The governments role changed from that of provider of housing to enabler of the housing sector to function. Principally this involved a reduction in government expenditure on housing and removal of inefficient subsidies, especially rental and construction subsidies. Publicly-owned housing was sold to sitting tenants, for a low or nominal cost. Although some countries maintained relatively high levels of public involvement in housing, the majority adopted the neo-liberal reforms deemed necessary to enable a well-functioning private housing market. Rental housing was marginalised and private individual home-ownership rates increased. While Western European housing markets were liberalising, Eastern Europe retained its focus on centrally planned and administrated
housing.23 Eastern and Western Europe housing policy and practice therefore diverged the most during the decade from the mid-1980s to the mid-1990s. The housing sector in Eastern European countries fundamentally changed as a result of economic, political and social changes during the early 1990s. Countries transitioned from centrally-planned housing sectors to marketorientated housing. The objective was to apply market principles, gradually but not slowly, to the housing sector. In some cases the liberalisation was even much more considerable than in some Western European countries. The most significant change was the widescale and quick selling of public housing units. Houses were transferred to their occupants through various measures, often at reduced rates, through various schemes (for instance vouchers or cheques), or for free (apart from a nominal fee). For example, in Armenia in 1990, government and local authorities owned nearly half of all housing (49 per cent) but by 2001 they owned only 3.9 per cent.24 The major problem in most post-Soviet countries was the non-existent or insufficient legal and institutional frameworks to support a well functioning housing sector and private ownership by individual households. In shifting away from government provision and subsidy of housing to a market housing
where the costs of housing were to be borne by individual households, housing affordability became a serious issue.25 Housing related costs increased significantly after the transition.26 With the reforms, GDP and real household incomes plummeted, high inflation produced high interest rates, and the banks raised interest rates on new loans. Housing finance demand significantly lowered. For example, in Hungary, loans in 1993 were only 47 per cent of their 1990 level.27 Downward mobility was common. Many households had to sell or move out of their house and take a smaller house to pay off debts, often for accumulated unpaid utility costs. As many households owned their units, the problem was energy and utility costs (water, services, garbage collection, district heating), which had risen considerably due to the deregulation and privatisation of these services. Overall, prices increased faster than household income.28 While some countries experimented with housing allowance programmes, these were seldom effective due to a lack of institutional capacity and limited resources. The socio-political changes led to a significant decline in housing production in most former Soviet Republics. People could not pay for new housing at market rates: only a select few at the upper-income level. Housing demand increased but supply did not match it, so house prices increased. For example in Ukraine, 179,000
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PART ONE
public housing units were produced in 1990 but production fell to only 9,000 units in 2001. The private sector did not make up the balance and consequently total housing production fell from 279,000 units in 1990 to only 64,000 in 2001.29 In most countries housing production halved compared with pre-transition levels.30 Furthermore post-Soviet countries inherited considerable quantities of high-rise housing of dubious quality. The quality was a result of the decision to use the cheapest forms of construction materials and methods.31 Nevertheless, housing markets have gradually improved in many Eastern European countries after the shock of the initial transition period. Policy responses and macroeconomic stability is improving housing supply (public and private), especially in the Baltic region, Poland, the Czech Republic, and Hungary.32 Housing production is increasing: it is now between 60 to 80 per cent of the level of production during the socialist era,33 although the majority of this is private owner-occupier housing, indicating a low availability of rental housing remains an issue to be addressed.34 As a result of the 2008 sub-prime housing crisis that originated in United States, affordability, especially in North America and Western European countries, has become an even more serious social and economic issue. Housing finance is significantly harder for households to obtain, house prices have alarmingly shifted, and unemployment has risen to relatively unprecedented levels. Consequently, many households have lost their homes to foreclosure, and for others purchasing housing is increasingly difficult. Rents are often exorbitant resulting in households having to spend a considerable proportion of their budget on housing expenditure and social housing is increasingly difficult to access and its supply in many countries is now at historic lows. Clearly there have been many ideological, theoretical, policy and practice shifts in the housing sector over the last 60 years. Even so, under all economic and political systems achieving universally affordable and adequate housing has remained elusive. Certainly progress is being made and the proportion of the population that lives in adequate housing
AFFORDABLE HOUSING IS BROADLY DEFINED AS THAT WHICH IS ADEQUATE IN QUALITY AND LOCATION AND DOES NOT COST SO MUCH THAT IT PROHIBITS ITS OCCUPANTS MEETING OTHER BASIC LIVING COSTS OR THREATENS THEIR ENJOYMENT OF BASIC HUMAN RIGHTS. HOUSING AFFORDABILITY, HOWEVER, IS MULTI-DIMENSIONAL AND INVOLVES MORE THAN THE OFTEN-USED SIMPLIFIED CONCEPTION OF THE RATIO OF HOUSE PURCHASE PRICE TO HOUSEHOLD INCOME.
is higher now than ever before, yet the historic changes illustrate the fact that the housing sector is fundamentally shaped by many actorspolicymakers, local authorities, private enterprise, households, among others-and whether housing affordability improves or worsens depends on the many actors, in particular the political will of national governments and local and regional authorities.
11
CAPITAL VARIABLES Material/ House Inputs Land Infrastructure House Purchase Cost
OCCUPATIONAL VARIABLES Material/ House Inputs Land lease/rates House Occupation Cost Service costs Building maintenance
Housing affordability for households Finance Interest rates and loan period Ability to finance purchase Ability to financially service
Savings and debts Savings and other assets (minus) Outstanding debts
Housing affordability is affected by many factors. Figure 6 outlines the basic components of housing affordability for households. Affordability is principally set by two main variables: capital variables (house purchase costs) and occupation variables (costs associated with keeping the house). The ability of a household to purchase a house is affected by the purchase cost (which is the sum cost of land, infrastructure, building materials and labour and profit) and the ability to finance the purchase (principally set by the mortgage down payment requirement and the balance of household savings). Once a house is purchased, the ability of a household to occupy and pay for the house is influenced by material inputs (land lease and rates, services costs, and building maintenance) and finance inputs (loan repayment period and interest rates (which are influenced by fiscal policy, etc), and household income minus nonhousing expenditure).
Housing affordability, therefore, involves more than the often-used simplified conception of house purchase price to household income. Affordability is multi-dimensional and it is the dimensions outlined in Figure 6 that this volume focuses on. For example, housing affordability problems in many Eastern European countries stem from the occupation dimensions of the affordability diagram. High service and building maintenance costs make adequate housing unaffordable. Another example is the ability of North American households to purchase a house is constrained by the increasingly unavailable or restrictive housing finance, in particular higher down-payment requirements since in the 2008 economic crisis. Measures of affordability While there is no universally agreed measure of what constitutes affordable housing, there are three common measures, which are associated with two components: housing costs and household income (Table 1).36 The first is house
PART ONE
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price to income ratio. The ratio is calculated by dividing the median house price by the median household income. It shows the number of annual median salaries it takes to buy a medianpriced house. Countries that have particularly high house price-to-income ratios are typically those with high land prices and construction costs.37 The second measure is house rent-toincome ratio. This ratio is calculated by dividing the median annual rent by the median annual renter household income. While there is no universally agreed ratio or percentage at which owner-occupied or rental housing is deemed unaffordable, these two measures enable cross-country comparisons as well as the ability to track housing affordability within a country over time, as incomes and house prices rise and/or fall. The third measure of affordability is the residual income assessment. It is represented as a percentage of household income spent on housing-related expenses and demonstrates a
Table 1: Measuring housing affordability
households ability to financially service housing without compromising on necessary non-housing expenditure.38 Although there is no universally agreed percentage, housing is generally deemed affordable when a household spends less than 30 per cent of their income on housing related expenses, such as mortgage repayments (for owner-occupiers), rent payments (for tenants), and direct operational expenses such as taxes, insurance and service payments.39, 40
House-Price-to-Income Ratio Measure Median house price divided by median household income. The ratio of the median freemarket price of a dwelling unit and the median annual household income. Very high or rising ratios imply that either there is no effective housing market or that land is extremely scarce, generally owing to regulatory inefficiencies or restrictions. A key measure of housing affordability. Also generally regarded as the single indicator that gives the greatest amount of information about housing markets.
House-Rent-to-Income Ratio Median annual rent divided by median annual renter household income. Incomes are median gross incomes of private and public renter households. High values imply that supply is not keeping up with demand and affordability is low. Low values usually imply controlled tenancies or a high proportion of public housing.
Housing-related expenditure as a percentage of income Annual median household income divided by annual median housing expenditure (mortgage payments, rent, services, taxes, insurance, etc). A high percentage indicates housing is negatively impacting on meeting nonhousing basic needs and the housing market is not functioning properly.
Warning Trend
Significance
A key measure of housing affordability, especially for low-income households who may be unable to purchase housing.
It can account for essential non-housing expenditure such as food, water, clothing, schooling, transport, etc and the decisions households make regarding housing and non-housing expenditures.
13
>
Box : UNECE Country Housing Profiles Since 1996 the UNECE has undertaken country housing sector reviews and published these as Country Housing Profiles. The country housing profile is a process-oriented exercise. At its core is an analytical study on the housing sector, drafted by independent international experts. The profiles represents a tool for Governments to analyse their housing policies, strategies, institutional and financial frameworks for the housing sector and to compare the progress made internationally and provide recommendations for improving policies and practices. The Profiles constitute a strategic analysis of a countrys entire housing sector. Each profile covers five major areas: (i) the framework for the housing sector transition; (ii) the existing housing stock and new housing construction; (iii) the institutional framework; (iv) the legal framework; and (v) the financial framework. As a voluntary exercise, the Country Profile study is undertaken only at the request of the country itself. The project starts with a compilation of relevant data on the housing sector of the country to be reviewed. An international team of experts from all over Europe, including countries in transition, is then formed. The findings from the study is published in English and translated to the national languages for distribution to interested parties. To date the following Housing Profiles have been prepared and published: Bulgaria (1996), Poland (1998), Slovakia (1999), Lithuania (2000), Romania (2001), the Republic of Moldova (2002), Albania (2002), Armenia, and the Russian Federation (2004), Serbia and Montenegro (2006), Georgia (2007),Belarus (2008), Kyrgyzstan (2010) and Azerbaijan (2010). The reader is referred to these publications for more in-depth analysis on the housing sector in these countries than can be presented in this volume.
Source: UNECE (2011) http://live.unece.org/hlm/prgm/ cph/welcome.html
in the world and some of the poorest; countries with long and strong democratic traditions and others with newly emerging democratic regimes; countries with some of the highest levels of housing provision and other with the most significant housing problems mirrored in housing deprivation and homelessness. These immense differences have a profound effect on the housing systems in these countries, making such comparative evaluations difficult. Nevertheless, where possible, housing challenges and policy responses are reviewed on a subregional basis using four clusters: Western Europe Andorra, Austria, Belgium, Cyprus, Denmark , Finland, France, Greece, Iceland, Ireland, Israel, Italy, Germany, Luxembourg, Malta, Monaco, Netherlands, Norway, Portugal, San Marino, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Turkey, United Kingdom. North America: Canada and the United States. Central and Eastern Europe (CEE): Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Czech Republic, Estonia, Latvia,
Hungary, Republic of Macedonia, Lithuania, Montenegro, Poland, Romania, Serbia, Slovakia, Slovenia. The Commonwealth of Independant States (CIS): Armenia,Azerbaijan,Belarus,Georgia, Kazakhstan,Kyrgyzstan,Moldova,Russian Federation,41 Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Ukraine. Data sources and analysis Efforts have been made to reflect the enormous heterogeneity in the UNECE as this has implications for the significant differences in the provision of housing and the types of housing policy responses. The analytical assessment is based on existing information from reports, such as the most recent UN-HABITAT Global Reports on Human Settlements and Government of the World Cities Reports. The analysis draws on comparative evaluations on the topic carried out by major international organisations and research institutes, as well as Land Reviews, country specific assessments of affordable housing alternatives, and UNECE Housing Profiles (see Box 1). It incorporates statistics and housing indicators from officially published sources of information and international databases.42, 43
PART ONE
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It should be noted that most countries in Central and Eastern Europe have only census-based information with limited indicators; Information on the affordability of housing is non-existent and data on house prices and rents are unreliable. The situation in the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) is even more challenging since the official statistics on housing include only a handful of monitoring indicators. Therefore, it should be recognised that access to reliable and up-todate data is problematic and poses challenges for comparative analysis on all dimensions of affordability. Volume structure Part One has provided the introductory, historical and conceptual setting for the study of affordable housing in Europe and North America. It has highlighted the major urban, economic, social, and historic factors in the region underlying differences in housing provision and country specific housing challenges. Part Two canvases the state of affordable land and housing in Europe and North America. It systematically reviews trends in housing
conditions with respect to housing needs, quality, affordability, tenure modalities, and dominant building types. The emphasis is on differences and similarities in housing conditions and on persisting problems with housing deficits, substandard housing and informal settlements. Part Three explores the critical linkages between housing challenges and policy responses. It focuses on new housing construction approaches, new subsidy regimes, responses to homelessness and the refuge crisis, provision of social housing, land shortages for affordable housing, and the provision of affordable housing through areabased renewal and social inclusion. The analysis highlights major achievements and challenges in addressing the multiple dimensions of affordable housing provision. Part Four outlines the key lessons learnt, particularly over the last two decades. It provides succinct recommendations for how to increase the regional supply of affordable land and housing. Finally, the conclusion recaps the major themes and draws attention to ways forward for local, national and global action.
15
16
PART ONE
Figure 7: Multi-storied housing dominates the housing stock in Malta Photo UN-HABITAT/Matthew French
17
Differences in housing conditions across countries reflect the legacy of past policies, institutional division of responsibilities for the provision of land and housing as well as housing preferences and choices.
18 18
PART two
2
PART TWO The state of affordable land and housing
Figure 8: Multi-storied housing in Marseille, France. Photo UN-HABITAT/Matthew French
AFFORDABLE LAND AND and HOUSING IN EUROPE Asia AND NORTH AMERICA
19 19
Although average dwelling floor area in CEE countries tend to be 25 per cent smaller than in Western Europe, the average distribution in terms of persons per dwelling is similar. Overall, the legacy of the socialist housing provision system has ensured a relatively higher availability of housing than could be expected given the present level of economic development. Presently, the GDP per capita in the sub-region is one third of the GDP average in the European Union (EU), which affects the amount of investment available for improvement in housing conditions.
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PART two
a recent rapid influx from rural areas, which has contributed to much stronger urbanization growth rates and exacerbating the pressure on local housing markets. In Tajikistan, for example, population growth from 1998 to 2005 was 16.5 per cent, while the growth in housing stock was only 9 per cent. Housing area per capita at the end of 2005 was 8.7 square meters, which is 27.5 per cent less than the norm of 12 square meters per capita established by the government. Similarly in Kyrgyzstan the population has grown from 4.7 million in 1997 to 5.1 million in 2005. The capital city, Bishkek, has over 200,000 migrants from rural areas reportedly experiencing acute housing shortages. In Dushanbe, the capital of Tajikistan, the citys population has reached close to 1 million due to rapid migration creating a deficit of 100,000 dwellings.48 A quantitative housing surplus Many countries in the region have a surplus of housing. For example, close to 1 million dwellings in the eastern part of Germany, extensively renovated after unification, are vacant. Neighbourhood upgrading programmes in some countries are demolishing unoccupied or unpopular housing, for instance in the Netherlands, Denmark and the United Kingdom.49
In Central and Eastern Europe, despite the popular myths of housing deficits, the housing surplus ranges from 786,000 units in Romania to 58,000 in Albania. In terms of its share of the total stock, most countries in South-Eastern Europe have a surplus in the range of 12 to 14 per cent with Montenegro (24 per cent) being an extreme case.50 Local housing market mismatches pose an additional and often neglected quantitative problem. Despite an overall surplus of housing, the census data indicate that many capital cities in the region experience housing shortages and overcrowding. Dwellings on average tend to be small, often accommodate more than one household, and the ratio of persons per room is higher than one. For example, in Serbia 18 per cent of the households (about 284,000) are classified as overcrowded. There are many countries with more than 3 occupants per room. Evidence from the census data in Albania, Bulgaria, Latvia, Ukraine and Romania indicate similar problems.51, 52 Underpinnings of the supply and demand mismatch Part of the mismatch is related to migration, especially the deficit of affordable housing in high growth urban areas. Locations that have the most dynamic labour markets typically have the
21
greatest housing affordability problems because people migrate to them in pursuit of employment opportunities. The deficit of affordable housing in certain urban areas also relates to inefficient use of the existing housing stock. For example, as data on vacancy rates in Figure 10 shows, more than a third of the housing stock in Greece is vacant. This figure is close to a quarter in Cyprus and Bulgaria. Vacancy rates in most CEE countries are higher than those in Western Europe, ranging on average between 10 to 14 per cent. Possible explanations as to why so many houses are vacant are the poor quality of such housing and the lack of housing demand in rural areas. In some countriesAlbania, Bulgaria and Romaniahigh vacancy rates are reportedly due to migration patterns. Absentee homeowners often do not rent out these units, even in urban areas where demand is high. In countries affected by war, massive displacement of the population has resulted in higher vacancies in areas where
people are reluctant to return.53 Last but not least, second homes and tourism houses, which are not used for permanent habitation, are a very important element of the housing markets in Croatia, Montenegro and Bulgaria, explaining the high vacancy rate and the surplus of housing in these countries. In fact, in Greece, Italy, France and Spain between 10 and 15 per cent of all dwellings are second homes.54
Figure 10: Housing vacancy rates in selected European and North American countries
Greece Cyprus Spain Italy Ireland Portugal Finland Germany Denmark France United Kingdom Luxembourg Netherlands Sweden
33.2 24.1 21.9 20.7 12.0 10.6 8.8 8.2 6.3 6.1 3.4 2.3 2.2 1.7
Western Europe
Bulgaria Croatia Romania Czech Republic Albania Slovak Republic Serbia Estonia Slovenia FYR Macedonia Poland Hungary Lithuania Latvia 0
24.0 14.0 12.5 12.3 12.0 11.6 11.0 10.9 10.1 9.0 5.3 5.1 3.7 0.3 5 10 15 20 25 30 % of total stock
Source: MoIIR, 2006 and Tsenkova, 2005
35
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PART two
However, the situation with piped water supply in the housing stock in CIS countries is particularly problematic, especially in Moldova and Uzbekistan with services available in only one third of the housing stock. In CEE, Albania and Romania stand out with half of the housing lacking piped water. Although urban areas
Table 2: Dwellings with basic services Country Western Europe and North America Austria Belgium Cyprus Finland France Germany Greece Ireland Italy Luxembourg Malta Netherlands Portugal Spain Sweden United Kingdom Canada United States Central and Eastern Europe Albania Bosnia & Herzegovina Bulgaria Croatia Czech Republic b Estonia Hungary Latvia Lithuania FYR Macedonia Poland
c d e
reportedly have higher levels of service, close to 3 million people in European cities lack access to piped water and 8 million to sewer.56 In countries in transition, high connection rates do not necessarily mean good quality of piped water since drinking water frequently fails to meet basic chemical standards.57
Year
Bath/ Shower 98.3 96.0 99.0 95.0 99.0 98.0 na 97.8 94.0 99.2 94.2 100.0 100.0 65.6 99.0 100.0 99.0 97.0 96.0 55.1 22.0 81.1 92.8 95.5 67.1 87.2 67.3 69.6 59.8 87.0
Piped water
Central heating
2003 2001 2001 2005 2002 2002 2002 2001 2002 2004 2001 2000 2002 2001 1999 2005 2001 2001 2001 2002 2002 2001 2001 2001 2002 2001 2003 2003 2001 2002
100.0 100.0 na 100.0 100.0 92.0 100.0 na na 99.6 98.0 92.9 na na 39.7
a
90.0 73.0 27.3 98.2 92.3 91.0 90.8 62.0 89.0 94.7 92.3 3.3 90.0 3.8 9.4 a 100.0 94.0 na na 1.0 3.3 16.8 3.6 81.7 59.0 52.9 65.2 71.6 8.6 77.8
>>
Denmark
100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 55.1 73.7 81.1 93.7 95.1 na 88.0 75.2 a 58.4 85.6 83.0
23
>>
Country Romania Slovak Republic Slovenia Serbia Commonwealth of Independent States Armenia Azerbaijan Belarus Georgia Kazakhstan Kyrgyzstan R. Moldova Russian Federation Tajikistan Turkmenistan Ukraine Uzbekistan
f
Year 2001 2001 2004 2001 2002 2000 2000 2000 2000 2001 2002 2001 2000 1999 2000 1997
Bath/ Shower 53.0 92.8 92.3 85.0 86.0 na na na na 24.0 30.9 64.0 na 30.0 na 13.3
Piped water 53.0 90.5 na 89.4 98.0 78.0 100.0 78.0 90.0 40.0 36.5 74.0 60.0 53.0 98.0 36.5
Central heating 25.9 74.3 79.1 21.2 81.0 na na na na 29.1 30.8 75.0 na 30.5 15.4 19.5
NOTES: a. 2001 b. Permanently occupied dwellings only, Population and Housing Census 1/3/2001 c. Occupied dwellings only, National Census of Population and Dwellings 2002 d. The figures only refer to England, not the whole UK e. Occupied conventional dwellings (excl. not stated) f. Permanently occupied dwellings only, Population and Housing Census 1/5/2001
Source: MoIIR (2006); Data for CIS countries from UNECE Housing database; Data for SEE from Tsenkova (2005).
In the case of water supply, sewer services are most problematic in Albania, Romania and CIS countries. The data indicate that a limited share of the housing has bath/showerUzbekistan (13.3 per cent), Bosnia and Herzegovina (22 per cent), Kyrgyzstan (24 per cent), Moldova and Turkmenistan (30 per cent). Urban-rural inequalities in sanitation are much more pronounced, particularly in South-Eastern Europe and CIS countries. Cumulative shortages of financing for infrastructure development in rural areas during the last 50 years, coupled with scarcity of public resources in the last decade, have resulted in widening differences in access to basic infrastructure between urban and rural areas. Despite the growing rates of housing construction in rural communities, mostly through self-help, public and private investment has been unable to close the gap. Figure 12 presents the pattern of urban-rural inequalities in nine select countries in SouthEastern Europe illustrating the difference in
housing quality standards in rural and urban areas. While the majority of the urban housing (80 to 98 per cent) has piped water, two thirds of the dwellings in rural Moldova, Albania and Romania lack modern water and sewerage facilities. The comparative data suggests a backlog in the provision of sewer for close to 70 to 80 per cent of the dwellings in Moldova and Bosnia and Herzegovina. In Albania and Romania 60 per cent of dwellings lack these essential services. Furthermore, the scarcity of resources for muchneeded upgrades in the technical infrastructure has led to deterioration of existing networks and frequent disruption of services. The provision of safe (improved) drinking water and adequate sanitation in the housing stock is therefore an important issue in many countries. It also requires an explicit emphasis on quality. The problems are complicated by the inability of national governments, municipalities and municipal companies to ensure maintenance
PART two
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Figure 11: Second homes and tourism houses, which are not used for permanent habitation, are a very important element of the European housing markets, for example in Paros, Greece. Photo UN-HABITAT/Matthew French
and investment in the existing systems. On the demand side, declining incomes and increasing poverty have prevented price adjustments to achieve cost recovery and to provide needed revenue for reinvestment.58 Another indicator that reflects the level of services in the housing stock is modern heating systems. District heating is widespread in Western Europe and also in a fair number of CEE countries where close to two thirds of the housing stock has access. Across the CIS as well as in SouthEastern Europe, this share is much lower ranging between 16 to 30 per cent. Overall access to centralised heating systems across the region is concentrated in the capital cities and some of largest urban centers.
Age of housing and housing types Closely related to housing quality is the age of the housing stock. The available data indicate the majority of the housing in the region was built after the Second World War, coinciding with urbanization and the growing affluence in these nations as outlined in Section 1.2. The oldest portion of the housing stock, built before 1919 in Western Europe constitutes close to 18 per cent of the total housing stock, while in most transition countries it constitutes only about 4 to 5 per cent. Greece, Finland and Spain have half of the average pre-1919 housing stock as Western Europe. Investment in housing provision during communism across the Soviet Union and Eastern
Figure 12: Dwellings serviced by water and sewer in select countries in 2002
Dwellings With Piped Water 100 80 60 40 20 0 Albania BiH Bulgaria Croatia FYROM Moldova Romania Serbia Kosovo 100 80 60 40 20 0 Albania BiH Bulgaria Croatia FYROM Moldova Romania Serbia Kosovo Dwellings With Piped Sewer
In urban areas
In urban areas
(FYROM: Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia; BiH: Bosnia and Herzegovina) Source: Tsenkova, 2005; Council of Europe, 2004
25
Figure 13: Public social housing in Minsk, Belarus. Photo UN-HABITAT/Claudio Acioly
Europe has resulted in waves of new construction, particularly in urban areas since the 1970s. A principal feature of the Soviet housing system was the large-scale multi-storied housing typology in urban areas and single-household self-built housing in rural areas. Nevertheless, a large majority of the housing stock that exists today in Eastern Europe was built between 1960 and the mid-1980s. The exceptions are Poland, Slovenia, Romania and the Czech Republic where a larger share of current housing stock was built between 1946 and 1970.59 Housing production in the post-transition years added less than 10 per
cent to the housing stock in most countries in transition. Elsewhere in Europe countries such as Spain, Ireland and Cyprus stand out with high rates of construction adding more than 15 per cent to the housing stock since 1990. Premature ageing and the dominance of multi-household apartment housing Several studies on housing in transition countries have pointed out two important aspects related to housing quality: the premature ageing of the housing stock and the dominance of multihousehold panel apartment blocks in urban
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Figure 15: Housing-related expenditure in select European and North American countries in 2004
Denmark Sweden Belgium Italy Finland Canada United States Germany France Netherlands Luxembourg Norway Austria Ireland United Kingdom Spain Greece Cyprus Portugal Malta Latvia Slovak Republic Czech Republic Estonia Poland Hungary Slovenia Romania Bulgaria Lithuania FYR Macedonia Serbia 0 5 10 30.0 28.2 25.9 25.8 25.4 25.4 24.7 24.5 23.5 23.2
20
25
30
35
housing markets. While there is a lack of data for all of the countries, recent censuses reveal that multi-household panel apartment blocks account for nearly half of the urban housing stock in Bulgaria, Romania, the Czech Republic and Moldova. Owing to industrialisation and urbanization policies,prefabricatedhousingdominates the residential landscape of post-communist cities. It makes up 70 per cent of all housing in Bucharest, 45 per cent in Sofia and 20 per cent in Ljubljana.60 Some countries in Western Europe also have a large share of high-rise prefabricated panel housing, mostly a legacy of post war renewal and reconstruction efforts. Although the quality of such housing in Western Europe is substantially better, today this housing typology is often the first to be marked for demolition and urban regeneration projects.61 Multi-household housing is the predominant typology across Western Europe and constitutes on average more than 47 per cent of the total
stock. The United Kingdom, Ireland and Belgium are notable exceptions with less than 25 per cent of their housing classified as multi-household. In Canada, multi-household housing constitutes less than 12 per cent and is concentrated in five large metropolitan areas. Some estimates, based on aggregated data of Western Europe from 2004, suggest that the share of dwellings in high-rise housing with more than four storeys is significant only in Spain (30 per cent), Italy (22.7 per cent) and Portugal (22 per cent). By contrast, in CEE countries the share of high-rise housing exceeds 35 per cent in Poland, Hungary and Slovakia.62
2.2 AFFORDABILITY
2.2.1 Housing costs and expenditure
Affordability of housing remains the fastestgrowing and most pervasive housing challenge in Europe and North America. Housing costs have increased with significant implications for access to adequate and affordable housing,
27
Figure 16: Households experiencing financial difficulties in select countries due to housing costs
45 42 40
35
Percentage of Households
30 25 25
24
24 22
20 15
15
14
14
13
13 10 9 6 5 2
10
0 United States United Kingdom Portugal Denmark France Belgium Greece Germany Finland Austria Italy Spain Ireland Netherlands Canada
particularly for marginalised vulnerable groups. For the majority of households in most Western European countries it is not that incomes are too low, rather housing is too expensive. Housing-related expenditure Housing-related expenditure, the proportion of household expenditure devoted to housing, varies
widely across European and North American countries (Figure 15). Housing expenditure comprises such aspects as water, electricity and gas as well as mortgage finance repayments, insurance, municipal rates and land leases. Denmark has the highest percentage (30 per cent), followed by Sweden (28.6 per cent).
Figure 17: New housing construction in the United States. Photo UN-HABITAT
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PART two
Malta has the lowest percentage (8.5 per cent) followed by Portugal (10.7 per cent). Therefore, households in Denmark spend 3.4 times as much as households in Malta on housing related expenses. Most CEE countries have comparable rates of household expenditure as Western European countries, with Latvia, Slovakia and the Czech Republic exceeding 22 per cent. Financial affordability difficulties A large proportion of households in European and North American countries are experiencing
significant financial difficulties due to housing costs across the region. In four countries Belgium, Spain, Portugal and Greecea quarter of households are financially stressed due to housing (Figure 16). In Italy this share is exceptionally high reaching 42 per cent. While the data is limited, it appears that countries with higher homeownership rates and limited tenure choice tend to have a higher share of households experiencing affordability problems. Furthermore, the situation appears to be more problematic in urban areas where higher prices
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Box 1: Affordability constraints and the housing crisis in the United States property purchase cost), and mortgage finance was widely available-and some argue underregulated-even to households who could not realistically sustain such financial commitments in the long term. House price appreciation was dramatic, especially between 2003 and 2005, which masked the financial instability problems.66 Many houses were purchased as investments, second homes or as rental properties rather than primary residences. The unsustainable borrowing was fuelled by an unfailing belief in the continued rise in house prices. However, by late 2007 the housing bubble had burst. House prices fell dramatically and foreclosures increased considerably. Indeed, the quality of housing loans deteriorated from the late-2000s until the height of the crisis in 2007. The crisis has severely impacted on the American economy and housing market. For example, house prices have continued to drop, consumption and investment is shrinking, there has been a slow-down in employment. The structural causes of the crisis, such as loose monetary policies of central banks, lack of regulation, and excess liquidity in financial markets produced unbalanced and ultimately unsustainable economic growth.67 Part of problem lay with the role of mortgage securitisation as a mechanism for allocating risks from real estate investments but more widely there were major flaws in structural design of the financial system, which must be addressedrather than individual household incentives-at the national and international level to avoid a repeat and improve the economic outlook.68, 69
Source: JCHS, 2007; Mah-Hui, 2008; Zandi, 2008; Hellwig, 2009; Demyanyk and Hemert, 2009.
By 2006 the number of households in the United States spending more than half their incomes on housing was rising rapidly, reaching 17 million (one in seven US households). Moreover, 2.1 million households were living in severely inadequate housing while about threequarters of a million people are homeless on any given night. Nearly half of all low-income householdsa total of 8.2 million renters and 5.0 million homeownershave severe housing related financial burdens. To cope with the high costs of housing, some households resort to living in small quarters or sharing space with others. While only three per cent of households live in such conditions, the largest metro markets, such as Los Angeles, San Diego, San Jose, and New York, have an overcrowding rate twice the national average. Immigrants are more than seven times as likely to live in overcrowded conditions From 2006 the housing situation deteriorated rapidly. The United States subprime mortgage market crisis played a central role in the global financial crisis that surfaced in 2008. The subprime crisis was fuelled by a considerable increase in housing finance credit and an associated rapid increase in house prices. Following a typical boom and bust cycle, house prices fell and interest rates rose leading many households to be unable to pay and resulting in high rates of foreclosures (loan providers taking possession of the house and reselling it to recover unmet loans). The boom and bust cycle was similar to that of the late-1980s in the United States and the Asian financial crisis of the 1990s.65 From 2000 onwards land and house prices soared, households borrowed a significant proportion to finance house purchase (sometimes even more than the value of the
29
THE MAJORITY OF HOUSING IN THE REGION WAS BUILT AFTER THE SECOND WORLD WAR COINCIDING WITH INCREASING URBANIZATION. IN EASTERN EUROPE, THE DOMINANT HOUSING TYPOLOGY WAS LARGE-SCALE MULTIHOUSEHOLD HOUSING IN URBAN AREAS AND TODAY SUCH HOUSING IS IN URGENT NEED OF UPGRADING.
for housing and concentration of poverty create cumulative disadvantages. The general incidence of basic unmet housing needs in immigrant households, regardless of their time of arrival in Canada, is over 18 per cent, a level higher than the average for all Canadians (13.8 per cent).63, 64 Likewise, in the United States housing unaffordability is reaching unprecedented levels (Box 1).
markets. This economic growth, however, contributed to increases in house price and overall housing demand for owner-occupier housing. Despite growing affordability concerns, housing markets showed few signs of cooling. Prior to 2008, house price inflation was relatively high although a handful of countries experienced only moderate price growth Spain (5 per cent less), France (3 per cent less) and Finland (2 per cent less). Three countries actually had notable increases in their house price inflation ratesDenmark, Greece and Norway. The Mediterranean islands of Malta and Cyprus had substantial price rises, reflecting their attractiveness as tourist/second home destinations. Only Germany and Portugal faced prolonged housing market stagnation. In several CEE countries price increases were at doubledigit levels, although growth was slower in the Czech Republic and Hungary. Poland led the rapid growth in house prices. In North America, the housing sector has undergone significant change. After setting records for home sales, single-family starts, and house price appreciation in 2005, the United States housing markets abruptly reversed from 2006 onwards (Box 1). Total home sales fell 10 per cent, single-family starts tumbled by 13 per cent, and inventories of unsold vacant homes reached a record 500,000. Foreclosures increased rapidly, particularly in the sub-prime mortgage market.70, 71 In Canada, however, both housing starts and sales reached record high levels with house price inflation in the range of 10 per cent per year since 2002.72 Information on house prices in the capital cities of CIS countries suggests they rapidly increased during the first half of the last decade. Prices per square metre in Baku, Azerbaijan and Almaty, Kazakhstan have reached USD 1,500 to 2,000,
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Box 2: Housing inequalities: Renters net worth declines 2005, owner households had a median net worth of 327,000 CAD, renters just 14,000 CAD (335,000 and 14,360 USD respectively). The typical, or median, homeowner went from being 18 times wealthier than the typical renter household in 1999 to 24 times wealthier in 2005.
Source: CMHC, 2007.
The real net worth of the average Canadian household increased 30 per cent, reaching 383,000 CAD in 2005 (392,000 USD). Differences in net worth by tenure are substantial indicating that homeowners are generally much wealthier than renters. From 1999 to 2005, the real median net worth of renter households dropped 5 per cent while that of owners rose 27 per cent. In
30
PART two
whereas in Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan and Dushanbe, Tajikistan they range from USD 250 to 700.73 With increasing real wages, better job prospects and mortgage lending becoming available, the demand for housing is likely to increase even further in CIS countries, particularly in cities with significant housing shortages and rapid urbanization. Rental housing affordability Rental housing prices have experienced more moderate growth compared with house sale/ purchase prices. Still, rent increases are in the double-digit figures for most countries in Western and Eastern Europe with a very dramatic increase in Poland, Slovakia and Latvia. The data presented in Figure 18 measures rents in 2003 compared to 1996, taken as a basis of 100. It should be noted that rents in postsocialist countries accounted for a low share of the household budget in 1996 (less than 10 per cent). The rental sector in most European countries is subject to a fair amount of regulation and rent control. Rents are regulated both by broad
Figure 18: Rent inflation in Europe and North America
central government rules and by the policies of municipalities. The broad principle is one of softening market rental movements. Rents are freely negotiated at the time when a household rents a dwelling. After that, however, rent controls apply. They may be linked to inflation or to rent levels in comparable dwellings. In Germany, for example, a rent increase can only be implemented up to a maximum of 20 per cent over three years. The national rent index rose one per cent annually between 2001 and 2005, which is less than the general rate of inflation. Unlike homeowners, in many European and North American countries households that rent have not been able to capitalise on rising house prices to accumulate household wealth, which has contributed to the inequalities between homeowners and tenants (Box 2).
Ireland Greece Spain Italy Netherlands Finland Cyprus United Kingdom Luxembourg Portugal Denmark Belgium France Sweden Germany Malta Canada Austria United States Poland Slovak Republic Latvia Slovenia Estonia Hungary Czech Republic Lithuania 0 50
152.3 142.6 136.1 127.8 124.1 122.7 122.2 121.8 120.5 120.1 119.6 113.3 111.6 111.3 109.8 109.7 108.0 104.6 102.0 288.2
99.0 100
300
350
31
Figure 19: Home ownership trends in European and North American countries in 2004
Source: Estimates based on data from: MoIIRC for EU-25, Tsenkova (2005) for SEE, UNECE database and Duncan, 2005 for CIS
and North America where the historical evolution of different housing provision systems has mapped a diverse tapestry of tenure patterns.74, 75 However, on the basis of processes and agencies related to the production, access, financing and consumption of housing, several broad tenure forms can be identified: public and private rental, private owner-occupied (single family, condominium/equity cooperatives), and other categories related to housing owned by government institutions, tenant cooperatives, under restitution, etc. With the risk of simplifying a very complicated matter the analysis will focus on the main characteristics and common features of different forms of tenure. There are wide ranging differences across the region with respect to ownership of housing. As explained in Section 1.2, homeownership has
grown steadily in most countries, particularly in those in transition (Table 3). In most of the CEE and CIS countries, owner occupation exceeds 90 per cent, which is well above the 65 per cent average in Western Europe (Figure 19). In fact, some of the poorest countries in Europe and North America have the highest rates of homeownership. Although some of this housing might actually function as private rental, responding to pressures from migration and labour market adjustment, the tenure structure in the post-communist block is quite polarized leaving only a small and residual sector of publicly owned social housing. Social or non-profit rental housing Social housing is owned by local governments or social housing providers. Its share is significant in several countries in Western Europe (Austria,
32
Finland, Sweden, and the Netherlands), while in Germany social housing constitutes only 6 per cent of the total stock and is declining gradually through government transfers. In most transition countries, social housing is not really defined in the legislation; however, public rental housing gradually assumes this function. Public housing is owned by local governments and is concentrated in urban areas. It is often funded with municipal or government/public enterprise funds and managed by municipal maintenance companies, which collect rents and handle tenant agreements. Rents are generally controlled and determined at the local level with some direction from central government.76 Bulgaria and Bosnia and Herzegovina have a share close to 9 per cent of the national stock, while in the Czech Republic, Latvia, Poland, Russia and Ukraine this share tends to be higher than 20 per cent.77 Ongoing privatisation continues to diminish the public rental sector in all four countries, in addition to the conversion of old-style housing cooperatives into condominiums. Privatisation of social housing in several countries in Western Europe has supported the transfer of units to sitting tenants. Although the scale of this tenure transformation and pricing policies differ, the outcome in quantitative terms is most
PRIVATISATION OF HOUSING TRANSFERRED SUBSTANTIAL PUBLIC ASSETS TO LOW-INCOME OWNERS WITHOUT THE NECESSARY RESOURCES OR INSTITUTIONAL FRAMEWORKS TO DEAL WITH THE RENOVATION BACKLOG AS WELL AS WITH RAPIDLY ESCALATING MAINTENANCE COSTS.
significant in the United Kingdom, where 2.16 million units have been privatised since 1989, the Netherlands (286,000 units) and Italy (130,000 units).78 In transition countries the privatisation of housing was the flagship of the reform process leading to significant transfers of public housing over the same period: Poland (1.4 million units), Latvia (410,000 units), and the Slovak Republic (327,500 units).
Figure 20: Brussels, Beligum, a city with a range of housing tenure options Photo UN-HABITAT/Matthew French
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THE NATURE OF CONDOMINIUM OWNERSHIP REQUIRES A COORDINATED APPROACH TO THE MANAGEMENT AND SYSTEMATIC MOBILISATION OF FINANCIAL CONTRIBUTIONS FOR MAINTENANCE OVER THE LIFECYCLE OF BUILDINGS, YET IN MANY EASTERN EUROPEAN COUNTRIES SUCH COORDINATION DOES NOT EXIST.
Reform strategies in transition countries mainly differ with respect to the price at which dwellings were sold to existing tenants. They can be grouped into the following categories: voucher privatisation (Bosnia and Herzegovina, Latvia, and Lithuania), privatisation free of charge (Albania, Armenia, Moldova, Georgia, Kazakhstan, and Russia), and low-price privatisation typically at 10 to 15 per cent of market value (Bulgaria, Romania, and Serbia and Montenegro). Although the extent of sales varied considerably both within and between countries, three common and serious problems emerged. Firstly, privatisation progressed rapidly without the necessary institutional and legal framework for the effective management of multi-household housing. Secondly, the transfer of ownership rights in most countries was limited to the dwelling unit itself without the necessary provisions for the transfer of corresponding shares of common areas: land, building envelope, stairs, servicing areas. Thirdly, privatisation policies transferred substantial public assets to low-income owners without the necessary resources to deal with the renovation backlog as well as with rapidly escalating maintenance costs.79, 80
Private rental housing is a significant tenure modality in Canada and the United States where it constitutes close to 30 per cent of the housing stock. In Germany, private renting is around the same size as owner occupation (around 45 per cent), by far the highest share in Western Europe. The size of the private rental stock in Finland and Sweden is also significant, due to the tenure neutral housing policies pursued in these countries. Private renting has increased significantly in Central and Eastern Europe largely as a result of rent control elimination, privatisation and restitution of public housing. Its share is particularly significant in Croatia and the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia (close to 11 and 9 per cent respectively). The Czech Republic (7 per cent) and Latvia (6 per cent) have acquired a notable share due to restitution policies. Private renting is much more common in Eastern European capital cities, though mainly on an informal basis. For example, 28 per cent of housing in Warsaw is privately rented, close to 15 per cent in Vilnius, and 5 per cent in Bucharest. Rents in the sector are determined by the market. Rental market pressures are considerably higher in the capital cities and large urban centers where foreign diplomats, businesses and expatriates often seek rental housing. Despite these demand trends, in most European and North American countries private investors are still reluctant to undertake new rental housing provision. Rental agreements, security of tenure and eviction procedures are specified in various legal acts. In North America and Western Europe, the private rental sector often provides a much-needed supply of affordable housing, particularly in the older parts of large urban centers. Low-income renters in Canada, the United States, the United Kingdom, Finland, Sweden and Germany are eligible to receive housing allowances. In Central and Eastern Europe, the sector is considered to be larger than official estimates as it functions, to a large extent, as part of the informal economy. Informality is motivated by the owners aim to avoid rent regulations and landlord taxation.81
34
41 33 13 40 25 39
b
55 67 64 54 72 54 42 76 79 68 64 na 45 67 78 39 65
na na na 5 0 na na na na na na na na na 17 na
4 0 23 1 3 7 0 4 3 6 6 na 0 5 7 0 0
41 32 14 38 33 40 55 20 21 19 29 26 44 21 11 45 31
51 38 68 49 63 57 45 74 79 73 68 70 56 75 82 38 69
na na na 7 0 0 na na na na na na na na 17 na
9 2 18 6 4 3 0 6 na 9 3 4 0 4 7 0 0
58 20 18 25 30 na 55 28 15 44 35
United Knigdom
Central and Eastern Europe Czech Republic b Estonia b Hungary Latvia Lithuania Poland Slovak Republic Slovenia 40 na 36 79 na na 28 na 38 na 74 21 na na 49 61 19 na na na na na 22 na 3 na 0 0 na na 1 39 29 4 6 19 7 25 8 9 47 96 93 77 91 57 85 84 17 0 na 4 na 18 7 na 7 0 1 na na 0 3 7
NOTES: a. Belgium and Ireland: occupied dwellings; Austria: annual average, principal dwellings b. Belgium: 1991, 2002; Cyprus 1992, 2001; Czech Republic: 1991, 2001; Denmark: 1993, 2002; Estonia: 1991, 2003; Ex-GDR 1993, 2002; Germany, 1991, 2001; France: 1996, 2002; Ireland: 1997; Malta: 2002; Portugal: 1991, 2001; Sweden: 2001.
Source: MoIIR (2006)
Owner-occupied housing Owner-occupied housing is dominant across the region, although its share in urban areas is
much lower. While this might be the general rule, as noted above a distinguishing feature of housing markets in post-communist cities is the
35
PARTICULAR ETHNIC OR SOCIAL GROUPS OFTEN SUFFER THE HARSHEST DOMESTIC LIVING CONDITIONS AND ARE SYSTEMATICALLY EXCLUDED FROM ACCESSING ADEQUATE AND AFFORDABLE LAND AND HOUSING.
high rate of homeownership, often exceeding 90 per cent.82 In most capitals in CEE and CIS countries this tenure structure is the outcome of mass privatisation,83 while in others (Sofia, Budapest, and Belgrade) it simply reinforced existing patterns under Government socialism. In contrast, capital cities in Western Europe have considerably lower rates of homeownership, for instance Vienna (17 per cent), Paris (28 per cent), Helsinki (45 per cent), and London (58 per cent).84 Homeownership rates also differ by dwelling type in different countries. For example, in Canada, Latvia, the Czech Republic, Hungary, Lithuania and Austria, ownership of single-household homes is higher than ownership of units in multi-household housing. Single-household owner-occupied housing is dominant in smaller cities and rural areas. Sometimes referred to as self-help housing,
this form of housing provision has a long tradition in Southern Europe. In a number of Western European countries (Germany, France, Greece, Spain) households acts as developers or promoters of their own housing, thus reducing the entry costs and controlling the quality of the final product. In Canada, the United States and the United Kingdom, the owner-occupied market for single-household homes is controlled by large developers, operating on a regional and even international basis. Condominiums and equity cooperatives are another option for owner-occupation. Owners have individual rights over their dwelling unit but costs are lowered through collective ownership over the land, common elements and shared maintenance. There are significant variations in the quality, structure and type of condominiums.85 Some are built using traditional construction methods with greater involvement of homeowners through building cooperatives (Bulgaria, Croatia, and Serbia). Other condominiums have been developed by private or public construction enterprises in multi-household structures. In some countries, equity cooperatives were often formed with some subsidies, but members rights can be bought and sold in the marketplace, for example in Sweden, the Netherlands, and Slovakia. In the Czech Republic, equity cooperative ownership accounts for 17 per cent of the housing stock. The nature of condominium development and ownership requires a coordinated approach to management and systematic mobilisation of financial contributions for maintenance over the lifecycle of buildings. While in Western Europe and the United States, condominiums are often
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Box 3: Housing exclusion: the case of Roma communities In Serbia around 70 per cent of Roma households reportedly live in dwellings with no water connection, over 80 per cent with no sewerage, and 65 per cent in illegally built settlements. In Montenegro, 32 per cent of Roma live in collective centres and 47 per cent live in barracks, while 45 per cent lack plumbing and tap water at home.
Source: World Bank, 2005.
Roma communities in Serbia and Montenegro often live in unsafe and impoverished areas. They build housing by themselves using non-durable materials or employing old, unused railway cars, buses, etc. The majority of their housing units are, in fact huts, shacks or so-called tent settlements. In a number of these settlements connections to water tend to be illegal; there is no waste collection, no sewerage systems and no indoor plumbing.
36
managed by professional organisations with a strong emphasis on quality of maintenance and services, in transition countries the lack of management experience, structural defects and poor services often plague the condominium segment of the housing market. Studies often refer to socially segregated homeowners in problematic housing estates of Budapest, Sofia, Bucharest and Chisinau.86 Tenant cooperatives Tenant cooperatives are a hybrid between owning and renting. They often operate with government subsidies and can be allocated to a range of income groups: from people living in high quality inner city new built housing, to very poor people coming together to build houses by self help or mutual aid. Cooperative housing is neither rental housing nor individual ownership. Members of a cooperative have the right of occupancy of a particular unit. The housing cooperative is a legal entity that owns the housing project, the land and improvement on it. Each tenant member pays rent corresponding to the share of use of the common space. A right of occupancy agreement is signed between tenants and the management board of the cooperative. It specifies financial contributions, rights and responsibilities, and the procedure that members will follow if they leave the cooperative. Tenants participate in the decision-making process and often contribute to housing management.
TENURE CHOICES ARE MUCH BROADER IN FINLAND, SWEDEN, AUSTRIA AND DENMARK DUE TO A BALANCED TENURE STRUCTURE OFFERING A CONTINUUM OF OPPORTUNITIES RANGING FROM SOCIAL HOUSING TO PRIVATE RENTING TO HOME OWNERSHIP.
The share of tenant cooperatives is relatively high in Poland (18 per cent), Slovakia (7 per cent), Denmark (6 per cent), and Latvia (4 per cent), although in Slovakia cooperatives are closer to the equity type of housing cooperative. In Germany tenant cooperatives account for 6 per cent of the national stock with 40 per cent of this in the East and the remaining 60 per cent in the West. Tenant cooperatives have been an obvious target for privatisation in most transition countries. The privatisation process has also progressed in Western Europe. These trends have been
Figure 21: Occupant additions and modifications to multi-household housing in Tajikistan Photo UN-HABITAT/Claudio Acioly
37
AMONG OTHER CAUSES, THE FLOW OF MIGRANTS FROM RURAL AREAS AND THE INFLUX OF REFUGEES AND INTERNALLY DISPLACED PEOPLE HAVE CONTRIBUTED TO ILLEGAL, INFORMAL HOUSING CONSTRUCTION IN INFORMAL SETTLEMENTS ON THE PERIPHERY OF LARGER CITIES, PARTICULARLY IN EASTERN EUROPE.
significant as indicated by the number of dwellings transferred into private ownership since 1989, for instance in The Netherlands (169,000), Sweden (11,614), and Finland (4,300).87 The importance of tenure choice Tenure choice is important for long-term housing market stability and access to adequate and affordable housing. Most countries in the region have a polarised tenure structure with extremely high share of owner occupation. Entry into owner occupation is expensive, even if it might lead to significant financial benefits over the long term. Households, particularly in the CIS, have limited resources to sustain their homeownership status acquired through privatisation or during government socialism under a universal subsidy regime. With few alternative options, new households may be pushed into rental housing when financially stretched. In a number of countries like France, Germany, Canada and the United States a large share of private rental housing provides options for labour mobility. Tenure choices are much broader in Finland, Sweden, Austria and Denmark due to a balanced tenure structure offering a continuum of opportunities ranging from social to private renting to homeownership.
In contrast, in several European countries the rental option is severely curtailed (for example in Spain, Greece, Italy). Households have to rely almost solely on access to affordable housing finance, intergenerational transfer of wealth and often delayed entry to homeownership and the opportunity for a decent rental home. The rental sector in some CIS countries is non-existent and in many CEE countries ongoing privatisation continues to reduce its share.
38
lives in slums (56 per cent in Tajikistan, 52 per cent in Kyrgyzstan and 51 per cent in Uzbekistan). Elsewhere in the sub-region these rates are 30 per cent for Moldova and Kazakhstan and 19 per cent in Romania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia and Macedonia. Many ethnic or social groups often suffer the harshest domestic living conditions. Studies have highlighted the housing deprivation of Roma communities who often live in city slums (Box 3). Romania has the highest absolute number of Roma in Europe (between one and two million), while the share tends to be lower in Hungary, Bulgaria, and Slovak Republic. In Western Europe, the largest Roma populations live in Spain (around 600,000), France (around 300,000), Italy (around 100,000) and Germany (around 70,000). Roma communities often live in mahalas, inner city slum housing dating back to the 19th century. Throughout Europe and North America, housing challenges for minority groups are indeed complex, multifaceted and require special attention. Informal settlements The challenge substandard housing and slums - as defined according to UN-HABITATs operational definition - is directly related to the proliferation of informal settlements. Their typology is diverse. They vary in terms of standard (from slums to lavish residences), location (from protected areas to suburbs and city cores) and size (from several small units to settlements with over 50,000 residents). Among other causes, the flow of migrants from rural areas and the influx of refugees and internally displaced people have contributed to such illegal, informal construction in larger cities. Apart from addressing urgent housing needs, illegal investment in real estate has been used by many households as a shield against instability and hyperinflation. Often these areas lack roads, basic infrastructure and social facilities such schools and hospitals, and pose a challenge to the public health of large urban centres in the region. For example, Skopje, the capital of the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, has 27 illegally constructed neighbourhoods that date back to the earthquake in the 1980s. Informal settlements in Belgrade, the capital of Serbia,
occupy 22 per cent of the land for construction, and in Tirana the capital of Albania, 45 per cent of the population lives in informal settlements on the outskirts of the city. In Turkey, haphazard and rapid population movement to urban areas has created problems with informal settlements. Such problems are manifested in the lack of affordable housing, inadequate infrastructure, shortages in water and electricity supply, and limited access to services such as education and health. In Kyrgyzstan rural poverty has pushed people to cities in search of jobs and better livelihoods. In the past five years 150,000 to 200,000 people have migrated to Bishkek from the provinces. Osh, the countrys second largest city, has experienced a similar influx resulting in informal substandard housing on the periphery. Legalising informal settlements entails the provision of infrastructure such as roads, water, sewerage and electricity, and requires significant investments. The presence of informal settlements along the coastal areas, often for recreational purposes, also points to the unresolved complexity of access to urban land and housing in Greece, Portugal and Cyprus.
HOUSING SHORTAGES ACROSS MOST COUNTRIES IN EUROPE AND NORTH AMERICA ARE OFTEN ASSOCIATED WITH PARTICULAR HOUSING TYPES, LOCATIONS AND QUALITIES RATHER THAN THE ABSOLUTE SHORTAGE OF HOUSING. THERE ARE, HOWEVER, SEVERE HOUSING DEFICITS IN SOME EASTERN EUROPEAN COUNTRIES.
39
War damaged housing The share of substandard housing has increased dramatically in countries that have been, or still are affected by war. For example, in Bosnia and Herzegovina these challenges are particularly significant. Some 445,000 homes in the country have been partially or totally destroyed, which is more than a 37 per cent of pre-war housing stock. According to the Ministry of Refugees and Human Rights the level of reconstruction in housing is some 37 per cent, with close to 164,000 housing units reconstructed as of 2004.
Of the housing units that need reconstruction, almost half (44 per cent) have over 75 per cent of their built fabric damaged beyond easy repair. In such countries repairing these buildings is a significant challenge. In Kosovo, 30 per cent of the housing stock was damaged and in some cases whole villages were totally destroyed. According to the Ministry of Public Construction in Croatia the damaged and demolished housing stock is over 200,000 dwelling units, representing close to 13 per cent of the total national housing stock.
Figure 22: Renovation and extension of housing in Berlin, Germany. Photo UN-HABITAT/Matthew French
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82 Tsenkova, S. (2006). Beyond Transitions: Understanding Urban change in post-socialist Cities. In Tsenkova, S. and Z. Nedovic-Budic. (Eds) The Urban Mosaic of Post-socialist Europe, Heidelberg: Springer-Verlag. 83 For example Tirana, Vilnius, and Tallinn. 84 City of Helsinki (2002). Urban Facts. Helsinki: City of Helsinki Research Department. 85 UN-HABITAT (2002b). Report of Colloquium on contribution of the co-operative sector to housing development in transition countries. Nairobi: UN-HABITAT; UN-HABITAT (2005a). State of the World Cities Report 2004/05. London: Earthscan. 86 (Baucentrum International (2004); European Commission (2004). The Situation of Roma in an Enlarged European Union. Brussels: European Commission, Directorate-General for Employment and Social Affairs, Unit D3. 87 Ministry of Infrastructure of the Italian Republic & Federcasa (MoIIR) (2007). 88 Eurostat (2007). Europe in Figures 2006/07. Brussels: European Communities. 89 UN-HABITAT (2004b). Urban Land for All. Nairobi: UN-HABITAT. 90 UN-HABITAT (2003b) The challenge of Slums: Global Report on Human Settlements. London: Earthscan. 91 UN-HABITAT (2002a). The State of the Worlds Cities 2001. London: Earthscan. 92 International Finance Corporation (IFC) (2006). 93 Wegelin, E. (2003). Refugee-related Housing Issues in selected SEE Countries presented at CEB/WB Housing Conference, Paris, April 2003.
Figure 23: The regular yet incrementally-developed form of residential areas in Athens, Greece. Photo UN-HABITAT/Matthew French
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Figure 24: Partly-refurbished panel housing in Czech Republic. Photo UN-HABITAT/Matthew French
43
The provision of new housing in European and North American countries is dominated by private sector investment and output. Over 80 per cent of new housing is produced by private developers, with a significant share of this output single-household detached housing, particularly in Central and Eastern Europe.
44 44
PART THREE
3
PART THREE Addressing the challenge: affordable land and housing delivery trends and patterns
Figure 25: New housing development in Tajikistan Photo UN-HABITAT/Claudio Acioly.
AFFORDABLE LAND AND and HOUSING IN EUROPE Asia AND NORTH AMERICA
45 45
3. ADDRESSING THE CHALLENGE: AFFORDABLE LAND AND HOUSING DELIVERY TRENDS AND PATTERNS
Having outlined key dimensions of affordable land and housing in European and North American countries in the Part Two, this part explores several dominant policy and market mechanisms that countries are undertaking to improve land and housing affordability. It covers such mechanisms as new housing construction, subsidy regimes, responses to homelessness and the refugee crisis, the provision of social housing, the challenge of increasing land supply for new housing developments and the integration of affordable housing through urban regeneration projects. Each mechanism alone is unlikely to be a panacea to the problem. Yet they demonstrate opportunities for action to tackle the increasing housing affordability challenges in European and North American countries.
and institutions have emerged. Public/private partnerships have become more prominent and a robust private sector has continued to be the main mechanism for the provision of housing and housing - related services. On the other hand, rates of housing construction have reached historic low levels with considerable loss of residential capital due to subsidy cuts and macroeconomic adjustment. Construction rates-measured in numbers of dwellings per 1,000 residents-in 1990 and 2004 indicate that new housing construction in Western Europe has remained stable in most countries with the exception of Ireland and Spain, where rates doubled over the last decade. A decline in the range of 20 to 25 per cent is observed in Sweden, Italy, Finland and the Netherlands, although these may just be temporary adjustments rather than indicative of continuing long-term trends. Although data is limited, since the beginning of the global financial crisis housing contruction rates have decreased in many countries, especially the United States. An important feature of European and North American housing sectors is the shift from new housing construction to renovation and rehabilitation of existing housing. Although production and investment in housing has declined, evidence from Canada, the Netherlands, the United Kingdom, France and Germany suggests that private investment in improvement of existing housing has increased (most of the lending activity refers to these types of loans), which may be offsetting declining new construction to a considerable degree. Subregional patterns: post-1989 signs of recovery In transition countries different subregional patterns emerge. Housing construction is showing signs of recovery, particularly in CEE reflecting macroeconomic stability, rising consumer confidence and availability of mortgage credit. In South-Eastern Europe, the level of new production is around half of the level in the 1990s, although between 1995 and 2002 rates of housing production were relatively stable across the sub-region (Figure 26). Private developers continue to face financial difficulties, high inflation and a lack of adequate credit supply.
PART THREE
46
Figure 26: Rates of new dwelling construction (per 1000 people) in South-Eastern Europe, 1989-2002
6 Annual new dwellings per 1000 people Bulgaria
Macedonia
With a few exceptions, mortgage lenders have been reluctant to introduce alternative mortgage instruments more suitable to inflationary environments, although recent develpments in Bulgaria and Romania suggest a rapid growth in mortgage lending and greater diversity of mortgage products. In CIS countries the impact of the turbulent economic and social transition on housing output is much greater. Lower GDP growth, persistently high inflation and low levels of public investment have reduced housing output to half of its early-1990 level. For example, new housing construction output in 2002 in Azerbaijan was only 50 per cent of the 1993 level. In Georgia it was 40 per cent, Ukraine and Moldova 35 per cent and Kazahstan 23 per cent.94 The situation, however, has been improving. In countries located in Central Asia (which are part of the UNECE) the volume of new housing construction has tripled since 2003, albeit from a very low level. For example, in Azerbaijan new housing construction has increased from 560,000 square meters in 2001 to about 1.4 million square meters in 2005, with half of that concentrated in Baku. In 2005 alone, new housing completions led to an increase of 1.5 per cent in the housing stock. In Kazakhstan new housing construction in 2002 was 1.5 million square meters and reached 5 million in 2005, partly fuelled by some
government programs accounting for 25 per cent of the output.95 Growing housing demand, remittances and improved income prospects seem to be the driving forces behind the increase.
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IN WESTERN EUROPE AND NORTH AMERICA, HOUSING POLICIES HAVE EMPHASISED THE IMPORTANCE OF FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS SUCH AS MORTGAGE INSURANCE, TAX INCENTIVES AND DEMAND ASSISTANCE TO TARGET GROUPS TO FACILITATE ACCESS AND CHOICE.
insurance, tax incentives and demand assistance to target groups-to facilitate access and choice. However, due to price inflation and higher rates of homeownership the gap between income and entry costs has continued to increase. For lowincome households this has made affordable housing of decent quality more difficult to obtain. In transition countries rapid house price increases in the last five years, coupled with high unemployment and higher interest rates on
mortgages have excluded more than 80 per cent of new households from the market of new housing construction. The previous housing shortage has been replaced by a shortage of affordable housing, suggesting a deepening housing crisis. Meanwhile, existing homeowners find it increasingly difficult to pay the cost of housing servicesutilities, heating and maintenance; lack of investment in the latter systematically erodes the quality of the housing stock. Subsidy regimes Subsidy regimes have emerged in both Western and Eastern Europe. These subsidies focus on improving financial access to owner-occupied housing. Mortgage interest tax relief exists in Ireland, the Netherlands, the United States, the United Kingdom and Spain. France offers subsidies on savings schemes for many newbuild and renovated properties and provides a quarter of a million zero interest rate mortgages annually. Looking beyond this group, housing subsidies and tax breaks are common in Austria, Germany, Russia, Croatia, the Czech Republic, Hungary and Poland. In most Western European countries a myriad of regulations make housing supply respond slowly to price rises and financial mechanisms. Although not directly subsidised, homeowners in the United States and Canada are subsidised by tax relief. A criticism of such mechanisms is that part of these subsidies leak out to benefit mortgage and other providers in the housing systems, and raise
Figure 27: New housing units in Washington D.C, 2009 Photo UN-HABITAT
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Figure 28: New housing schemes in Minsk, Belarus. Photo UN-HABITAT/Claudio Acioly.
the value of existing dwellings and development land. The prime intended beneficiaries are the better-off owner-occupiers who can qualify for mortgage interest tax relief.96, 97 The new subsidy schemes in Central and Eastern Europe have been criticised for being particularly inefficient in targeting households in need and in supporting the most affluent housing consumers.98, 99 Meanwhile, demand-based subsidies to lowincome renters have failed to keep pace with the rising housing costs. In most transition countries such assistance is non-existent and where it has been launched, for example in The Czech Republic, Poland, Romania, Estonia and Latvia, it reaches only a small number of households and is grossly inadequate.100 In the United States, federal assistance to very lowincome households reaches only about onequarter of eligible renters. Housing assistance as a share of total non-discretionary spending dropped from 10.2 per cent in 1998 to 7.7 per cent in 2006, failing to keep up with inflation.101 Availability of housing finance New housing construction is quite sensitive to changes in housing demand and macroeconomic conditions. As it is mostly provided by private developers and financed by individual households (through commercial mortgage banks), the availability of mortgage finance has
a critical impact on rates of housing production and growth. Mortgage lending in Western Europe and North America increased significantly during the years preceding the 2008 financial crisis. For example, the volume of lending in 8 of the 12 Euro zone countries increased at double-digit rates in 2006. The increases were the highest in Greece, Ireland and Spain. Outside of the Euro zone, mortgage growth was high in the UK and the Scandinavian countries.102 Despite the rapid expansion of mortgage debt in Ukraine, Turkey, and Russia, it prepresents less than 3 per cent of GDP, compared with 40 to 105 per cent in Western housing markets; the subregional differences are presented in Figure 29. Mortgage borrowing has been the keystone in the transition to a market-based housing system in CEE countries. Mortgage systems have had to be established. During the late-2000s, mortgage interest rates were reduced to levels similar to those in Western Europe, which led to a surge of consumer interest. For example, in 2006, in Estonia, typical mortgage interest rates had dropped to 3.6 per cent and 100 per cent loanto-value ratios were on offer.103 In contrast, in UNECE Central Asian countries the current mortgage market is less than 0.7 per
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THE NEW HOUSING SUBSIDY SCHEMES IN CENTRAL AND EASTERN EUROPE HAVE BEEN CRITICISED FOR BEING PARTICULARLY INEFFICIENT IN TARGETING HOUSEHOLDS IN FINANCIAL NEED AND INSTEAD SUPPORTING THE MOST AFFLUENT HOUSING CONSUMERS.
cent of GDP. Only a small number of banks in the region offer mortgages.104 A typical residential mortgage loan currently offered in the region (with the exception of Kazakhstan) is short-term (three to five years), requires a considerable down payment (30 per cent to 40 per cent of the house cost) and carries a high fixed annual interest rate (up to 25 per cent) for both USD and local currency loans. Housing finance challenges in the Balkans are similar.105 Migration and remittances Remittances are money transfers a foreign worker makes to his or her home country or country of origin. They can have a considerable impact on land and housing markets through the ability of households to buy or improve housing. The scale of remittances has been gradually increasing over the last decades and they now constitute one of the largest financial inflows to developing countries. The World Bank notes: Worldwide remittance flows are estimated to have exceeded 318 billion USD in 2007, of which developing countries received 240 billion USD. The true size, including unrecorded flows through formal and informal channels, is believed to be significantly larger. Recorded remittances are more than twice as large as official aid and nearly two-thirds of FDI [Foreign Direct Investment] flows to developing countries. 106
Remittances play an interesting role in the the region because it has both countries that are high senders and receivers of remittances (unlike in Africa, Asia, and LAC which have much higher percentage of inward remittance flow compared with outward flow) (Figure 30). Four of the top five remittance-sending countries are in the UNECE: (1st) the United States (42.2 billion USD per annum), (3rd) Switzerland (13.8), (4th) Germany (12.3) and (5th) the Russian Federation (11.4).107 Whilst in absolute terms European and North American countries are not the largest remittance receiving countries (India and China are with 27.0 and 25.7 billion USD per annum respectively, and the closest UNECE country is France with 12.5 billion USD), European and North American countries are the largest in terms of remittances as a percentage of GDP. Three of the top five remittance receiving countries as a percentage of GDP are: Tajikistan and Moldova (1st equal with 36 per cent), and Kyrgyzstan (4th with 27 per cent). Such high levels of remittances highlight the dominant role remittances play in these economies and housing sectors. Remittances relate to migration and European and North American countries, in particular Eastern European countries, are characterised by high rates of regional, intra-country migration. Most notably, 10 per cent of the population in CIS and CEE countries has emigrated (47.6 million people), and over half of this migration was intracountry migration (57.6 per cent), indicating that migration within CIS and ECE countries dominates. The top ten migration corridors in this region are: Russia-Ukraine, UkraineRussia, Turkey-Germany, KazakhstanRussia,Russia-Kazakhstan,Belarus-Russia, Uzbekistan-Russia, Serbia and MontenegroGermany,A zerbaijan-Russia,RussiaBelarus.108 Overall, remittances and migration patterns are a crucial part of regional and national housing sectors, in particular in terms of housing finance. While limited data is available regarding the degree to which remittances are applied to land and housing, knowledge and experience suggests that remittances are indeed used to improve housing, build new housing, pay off existing
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3.3
While some people may deliberately choose not to live in a house in a fixed location for particular lifestyle reasons, the vast majority of homeless people are so as a direct result of the lack of housing options that are affordable to them. The United States National Law Center for Homelessness and Poverty reported that over 3 million people were homeless in 2003, about 30 per cent chronically and the others temporarily. 44 per cent of homeless people worked full or part-time but did not earn enough to pay for
Homelessness gap Homelessness across the region is a serious challenge and a sign of a major failure of governments to ensure affordable housing for all.
Figure 29: Residential debt to GDP and Growth in Mortgage Debt 2009
Mortgage lending as a share of GDP in selected European and North American countries, 2009
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59.9
50
50
10.8
50
28.5 8.8
2.6
2.9
58.0
50
43.8
50
10.4
50
38.6 17.4
2.0
0 Inward Outward
0 Inward Outward
0 Inward Outward
Notes: Inward figures for 2006, outward figures for 2007. Based on the World Banks analytical regions.
Figure 30: Inward and outward remittance flows in developing countries according to region, 2007 (Inward) and 2006 (Outward). Source: The World Bank (2008)
housing.109 In many cases people are in and out of the homeless system, which includes shelters, hospitals and the streets. Since the global financial crisis there is a surge in family homelessness, and many people are becoming homeless for the first time, including formerly middle class people if current trends continue, an estimated 1.5 million additional Americans will become homeless over the next two years [2011-2013].110 Across the European Union, 3 million people were reported as homeless during the winter of 2003. It is very difficult, however, to exactly measure the extent of homelessness, which is
further complicated by the lack of consistent definitions. FEANTSA, the European Observatory on Homelessness, has developed a robust methodology to reflect the different aspects of homelessness and housing exclusion. The method explores three different domains: physical, legal and social. In operational terms, the definition uses seven categories: i) rooflessness, ii) houselessness, iii) insecure and inadequate housing, iv) inadequate housing and social isolation within a legally occupied dwelling, v) inadequate housing with secure tenure, vi) insecure housing
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(adequate physical characteristics, but no security of tenure, and vii) social isolation within a secure and adequate context. Categories (i) and (ii) define homelessness, while categories (iii) to (vii) define housing exclusion. The total estimate of the homeless population in Europe in the two categories that define homelessness is close to 600,000 with more than 60,000 people sleeping rough and another 400,000 in homeless shelters.111 Germany alone has more than 300,000 homeless people, mostly in overnight accommodation. In some countries a complex strategic policy response is being adopted to address homelessness, coordinating various policy fields, services and measures. In other countries, homelessness is not even recognised as a policy problem, or, if it is recognised, only fragmented measures are adopted. While several European countries have initiated different programs, in 2006 the Netherlands has adopted a Homelessness Action Plan with follow up action plans by the cities of Amsterdam, The Hague, Rotterdam and Utrecht. These aim to reach over 10,000 roofless people in the largest four cities and provide them with individual service pathways and sources of income, health care and employment.112 In Sweden, specific measures such as rent loss guarantees are used by some municipalities to encourage landlords to accept homeless people with low and uncertain incomes or with a poor rent-paying history. The Swedish Government also recommends the use of such guarantees for young people facing the same housing problems and made a special contribution of 100 million SEK (USD 158,000) per year in 2007 and 2008 to cover these costs. In Ireland, Homelessness - an integrated strategy was launched in the year 2000. The strategy put forward 24 proposals for action and aimed to develop a comprehensive government response addressing the problem. This included emergency, transitional and long-term responses, covering health, employment, education and housing. The UK also is paying more attention to addressing homelessness by focusing on
prevention of homelessness in addition to the implementation of its Homeless Housing Act. The crisis of displaced people and refugees Acrosstheregion,internalpopulation displacement continues to be a major problem directly related to housing. This is especially the case in the Balkans, the Caucasus, Turkey and Cyprus, where the number of IDPs stands at 2.8 million (Table 4).113 South-Eastern Europe has experienced the largest refugee crisis in Europe since World War II. By 1995, the region witnessed the displacement of more than 2 million people, which placed considerable pressure on housing demand, in particular cities and regions. Serbia and Montenegro still host the largest number of refugees and IDPs in Europe, including 226,104 IDPs from Kosovo. While the majority live in private accommodation, some 17,000 remain in collective centres. A crucial element underpinning the return of refugees to Bosnia and Herzegovina is the implementation of the property laws.114 Creating an atmosphere for a return through the effective implementation of the right to property, education, housing, health care and employment is an integral part of the overall strategy of stability and development in countries in the region affected by the refugee
ACROSS THE REGION, INTERNAL POPULATION DISPLACEMENT CONTINUES TO BE A MAJOR PROBLEM DIRECTLY RELATED TO HOUSING. THIS IS ESPECIALLY THE CASE IN THE BALKANS, THE CAUCASUS, TURKEY AND CYPRUS, WHERE THE NUMBER OF IDPS CURRENTLY STANDS AT OVER 2.8 MILLION.
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Box 4: The Housing Crisis of Refugees and Displaced people in Azerbaijan public buildings, and unfinished construction buildings with no utilities. Long-term solutions are being envisaged through resettlement (for example in new homes in Walicki), or restitution and compensation schemes. The government of Azerbaijan has allocated some 60,000 hectares of government and municipal land to IDPs and created 760 farms providing livelihoods for about 47,000 IDPs so far.
Source: Azerbaijan Ministry of Economy, 2003.
There are close to one million refugees and IDPs in Azerbaijan, which makes up 12 per cent of the total population. Although over 15 years have passed since the beginning of ArmeniaAzerbaijan conflict, over 1,722 refugee households have not been permanently settled. Within the IDP population, there is still a sizeable group living in unsatisfactory and precarious conditions. After 10 years, over 55,000 of them still live in tent camps, 32,000 in prefabricated temporary houses, 57,000 in farms and dig-outs, 8,000 in railway cars and the rest in hostels,
and IDP crisis.115, 116 While some progress is being made, there remains the need for government leadership and action to deal with the magnitude of the challenge, for example in countries such as Azerbaijan that have sizeable refugee and displaced populations (Box 4). As with Azerbaijan, restitution/compensation legislation and resettlement has also been implemented in the Balkans, Cyprus, Turkey and Georgia with varying rates of success. In northern Cyprus, a property commission was set up in March 2006 to deal with property-related compensation. However, IDPs and refugees in the Balkans, the Caucasus, Turkey and Cyprus continue to face poor housing conditions in collective centers, and significant obstacles to return and local integration.117
Several countries in the region have become the home of a significant number of refugees and asylum seekers, especially from North Africa. Table 4 demonstrates the scale of refugee populations in European and North American countries where the share is most significant. Despite the clear links between immigration, refugee acceptance and housing policies in the European countries, recent studies indicate that different levels of government control and housing provision exist. Most countries increasingly rely on a mix of integration and assimilation policies and promote market-based approaches to housing choices.118 In several countries (Portugal, Greece, Italy, Canada and the United States) the lack of policies aimed at improving housing for refugees and immigrants in the context of a largely private
Figure 31: Refugees, displaced people, and lower-income groups are all too often forced into homelessness and street-sleeping due to the unaffordability of urban housing, which is not acceptable for civil society - for example the social movement 'les Enfants de Don Quichotte' in Canal Saint Martin, Paris Photo UN-HABITAT/Matthew French
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housing provision system has resulted in growing housing problems for such households. In Italy, housing problems of immigrants have been defined as dramatic, particularly for the undocumented or irregular immigrants living in slums and squatter settlements. Containment and site clearance policies continue, and access to social housing requires five years residence period. It is estimated that in Greece only half of the countrys one million immigrants are recorded and the situation in reception centres for refugees is reportedly inadequate. In Portugal, in 2006, the issue of unfit housing for immigrants was exposed, particularly by the Immigrants Association, when several shanty settlements in the Lisbon area were pulled down. A special Rehousing Program provided homes only to those immigrant families that were already registered in 1993 whereas others were evicted.119Asylum seekers are also disadvantaged and over 105,000 live in temporary shelters. Although the evidence for CEE countries suggests that homelessness is less significant in quantitative terms, Poland and Hungary seem
to have a growing number of homeless people and rising demand for overnight shelters. Gender inequalities in access to housing While gender inequalities in housing in the Europe and North America may not be as problematic compared to other regions of the world, women still face considerable challenges in these housing markets. Most countries in the region have gender-neutral housing policies. Governments at all levels support equal access to property rights, ensuring the ability of women to own, maintain, invest in, dispose of, and inherit housing. In that regard, with its progressive policies and legislation, be it through long democratic traditions in Western countries or through a tradition of gender equality in formerly socialist/communist governments, can serve as a positive example to other regions. The gender debate in European and North American housing policy discourse centers on gender inequalities that are reinforced by the way housing is produced, designed, financed and consumed. This is particularly the case in housing systems dominated by homeownership,
Country Azerbaijan Bosnia & Herzegovina Cyprus Georgia Russian Federation Serbia & Montenegro Turkey Canada France Germany Netherlands Switzerland United Kingdom United States
Refugees 22,223 102,965 149,915 147,171 137,316 700,016 118,189 48,030 293,459 379,340
Displaced Persons 686,586 186,451 210,000 247,000 158,900 226,106 953,680 Source: Refugee data refers to UN-HABITAT, 2007b. IDP data from IDMC, 2007.
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THE GENDER DEBATE IN EUROPEAN AND NORTH AMERICAN HOUSING POLICY DISCOURSE CENTERS ON GENDER INEQUALITIES THAT ARE REINFORCED BY THE WAY HOUSING IS PRODUCED, DESIGNED, FINANCED AND CONSUMED.
where the gendered division of labour and status is maintained.120, 121 Within this context, the 56 countries in the region have different performance in terms of gender equality in general as well as in terms of solutions to discrimination of women in land and housing markets in particular. In The Global Gender Gap Report 2007, which covers a total of 128 countries, Sweden (1st), Norway (2nd), Finland (3rd) and Iceland (4th) once again topped the rankings. Latvia (13th) and Lithuania (14th) made the largest advances among the top 20 countries. They gained six and seven places respectively, as a result of smaller gender gaps in labour force participation and wages. The Report measures the size of the gender gap in four critical areas of inequality between men and women.122, 123 Rankings pertaining to economic participation and income inequalities are particularly important for access to adequate and affordable housing. A significant number of European and North American countries are global leaders in closing the gender income gap. Despite these gains, especially for well-educated and healthy women, comparative studies point out to the fact that many women face irregular access to competitive labour markets while often dealing with the triple burden of managing careers, raising a family and looking after aging parents. The problems are particularly significant for women on low incomes, seniors, and single parents. In the urban centers with higher housing
costs women-led households often face multiple disadvantagesinadequate housing conditions, affordability constraints, isolation in unsafe residential environments or threats from violence in crime ridden neighbourhoods. Furthermore, employment and income assistance, as well as existing health and social policies, significantly restrict eligibility for housing support and mobility. Most discouraging is the fact that in Europe and the United States the scope and depth of the housing disadvantages of women living on low incomes have not changed much. This is especially discouraging as there have been many years of well-intentioned housing policies and programs by all levels of governments as well as some successful strategies to provide a range of subsidised housing opportunities (shelters, assisted housing for seniors, non-profit community based housing projects). Single-parent households, most of them maintained by women caring for one or more children, have increased dramatically in the last decade and have poverty rates consistently over 50 per cent in Canada and the United States.124, 125 According to national reports on homelessness among women in 15 countries of the European Union, most vulnerable to poverty, homelessness and to inadequate housing are those women, with or without children, who face racism, illness and addictions.126 The general risk factors are aggravated by the structural disadvantages in housing and labour markets. Among ethnic minorities the problems escalate due to racism, discrimination, social isolation, which become even more pronounced in the case of asylumseekers burdened with regulatory constraints.
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countries where the sector is small (for example Ireland, Spain, Portugal, and Greece), rents are low since it is used as a safety net for vulnerable households. In these cases, allocation policies are driven by bureaucratic rules and demand-based assistance is more limited.127 In transition countries, where the proportion of social housing has diminished as a result of massive privatisation, local authorities are left with the worst-quality stock in a poor state of repair and with the poorest tenants. It is therefore unsurprising that in countries such as Slovenia and Lithuania social housing is used as a safety net and rents are below cost recovery levels with a limited number of tenants receiving housing allowances. What is surpising, however, is that a similar strategy is being adopted in Latvia, the Czech Republic and Poland (to some extent) (Figure 32). Countries in transition can benefit from the Western European experiences to improve their rent and social housing management policies to make the sector more sustainable.128 While affordability constraints are growing, overall less social housing is being provided for low-income households. In Canada and the United States a handful of local governments have had the political will to overcome some
of the barriers to the development of affordable housing. With little regulatory relief in sight and slim chances for a significant expansion of federal and provincial/government subsidies, the prospects for a meaningful reduction in the number of households with growing affordability problems in large urban centres are dismal. In the United States the federal government spends USD 4.7 billion per year in federal tax credits for building and rehabilitation of affordable housing, but has made little progress in stemming the reduction of low-cost rentals from the nations housing stock. Nearly 23 per cent of jurisdictions in the 50 largest metropolitan areas in the United States have some kind of incentivebased affordable housing program, while 15 per cent have a dedicated source of funds for affordable housing. While these measures are promising, it will nevertheless take much greater local and federal government effort to address the nations affordability problems.129 Developing housing for extremely low-income rental households is difficult without multiple subsidies and complex financing packages. While a lot of projects aim at private or non-profit sector involvement for the provision of new social housing, without capital subsidies to fill the gap between what low-income renters can
Figure 32: Social housing: Existing stock and tenant support, 2004
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IN WESTERN EUROPE SOCIAL HOUSING CONTINUES TO PLAY A MAJOR ROLE IN INCREASING ACCESS TO AFFORDABLE HOUSING OF DECENT STANDARD.
pay and the rents needed to cover development costs, programs cannot adequately serve the poor. Furthermore, the combination of higher construction and operating costs, along with stagnant or even declining rents tied to household income limits, can undermine the fundamental viability of affordable housing projects. In this context, it is not surprising that new social housing is not provided in most countries across the region. Where the sector is significant, there appears to be an ongoing commitment to maintain adequate supply. The data presented in Figure 30 demonstrate the share of social housing in selected countries as well as new social housing built in 2004 as a share of total new construction. Austria (30 per cent), Denmark (21 per cent) and Sweden (16 per cent) have the highest rates of new social housing production, followed by Finland, UK and the Netherlands with rates in the range of 12 per cent. Several Eastern
Europeancountries( Poland, the Czech Republic and Slovakia) have initiated new social housing programs in recognition of their importance for socio-economically marginalised groups in society. In addition to individual country government funding, construction of social housing in the UNECE region is financially supported by the Council of Europe Bank (CEB) through the provision of low cost credit guaranteed by central governments (Box 5).
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Box 5: Council of Europe Bank: Social housing projects This will enable over 40,000 people to gain access to affordable rental housing through a new model of non-profit provision. In Portugal projects support the construction of social housing and renovation of existing units by social housing providers (municipal agencies, co-operatives and associations), and also by private developers. In Romania CEB subsidised credits have financed a large-scale social housing programme targeting young people and lowincome families through the provision of 22,000 social housing units.
Source: CEB, 2007.
Since its inception, the Council of Europe Bank (CEB) has approved a cumulative amount of more than 9 billion of loans for the social housing sector, making the Bank a leading financier in this important area across a number of countries in Europe. During the last decade, CEBs activity in this field has accelerated. Indeed, since 1995, 5.6 billion in loans were approved for the financing of 128 projects. The Banks largest borrowers in this sector comprise Spain, Italy, Turkey, France and Poland. In Poland CEB supports the construction and modernisation of approximately 12,500 social housing units intended for low-income families.
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Box 6: Social rental housing in the Netherlands: Dutch Housing Associations The social rental sector in the Netherlands is one of the oldest and strongest in Europe if not the world. The growth of the Dutch social rental sector has a long history that dates back to the middle of the nineteenth century. At that time social housing was produced by small nonprofit associations, either associations formed by groups of people with a common need for housing in particular locations, for example workers needing housing close to workplaces, or associations that existed for philanthropic reasons, primarily to improve the housing situation of others in housing need. By the 1990s social rental housing, and the housing associations that produced this housing, accounted for a considerable 42 per cent of all housing in the Netherlands. Whist today the absolute number of social housing units and the percentage of total market share is lower (36 per cent), this is still much higher than other Western European countries, for example Denmark (19 per cent), France (18 per cent), Ireland (9 per cent), and Belgium (7 per cent). Indeed social rental housing currently comprises 75 per cent of all rental housing in the Netherlands. What is seminal of the Dutch sector is not only its large size but also its organisation and management, where social rental housing is owned and managed by non-profit organisations. These are legal entities who operate within a clear institutional government framework, exist solely for the purpose of social housing provision, and who are linked by Aedes (the national network association of housing associations). Nearly one-third of housing associations manage between 2,001 and 5,000 dwelling units (30.4 per cent, 204 associations), one-tenth manage between 5,001 and 10,000 units (10.9 per cent), and 8.1 per cent of all associations manage more than 10,000 units. Since the implementation of the Woonruimtewet (Housing Allocation Act) in 1947, housing was allocated on a needs-based system to cope with the pressing housing shortages. This system continued until the 1990s when the city of Delft introduced a new system based on a choicebased letting system, which became the norm throughout the Netherlands. Housing vacancies are advertised in newspapers with a description of the dwelling and applicant eligibility criteria. Applicants send in the reply coupon, which are processed and ranked by the housing association according to criteria such as household waiting time, age of applicant, and number of years in their current dwelling. Applicants are informed of the decision and the results published, which allows unsuccessful applicants to check that they were not disadvantaged and indeed had lower eligibility than the successful applicant. Regarding the relatively wide range of target beneficiaries and the success of Dutch housing associations, Professor Hugo Priemus notes: The hallmark of the social-rental sector in the Netherlands is precisely that a very differentiated target group is provided for, not only households with a low income, but also a broad intermediate group. The social-rental sector in the Netherlands can claim to be professional, effective, and for the most part efficient. Negative phenomena such as stigma, ghetto formation and social isolation hardly arise.130 While the Dutch housing associations are not the model of social rental housing that can simply be exported to other countries, they are a model that has shown the economic and social benefits of incorporating affordable rental options for households on low incomes, some on middleincomes, and those who deserve special attention: the elderly, disabled, and street sleepers and the homeless.
Source: Ouwehand, A. and van Daalen, G. (2002) Dutch Housing Associations: a model for social housing. Delft: DUP Satellite, Delft University Press.
have limited taxation power or capacity to build housing, social housing, outside of the market.133 Yet, it is the local governments that are closest to the needs of low-income households and where local shortages of land for affordable housing are manifested in a very explicit way. In countries with mature land markets, the shortage of land in high growth regions has contributed to the increase in house prices. England, for example, is heading for a property
shortage of more than one million homes by 2022, mostly concentrated in London and the South East. In response, government policies direct up to 60 per cent of the new homes to recycled brownfield sites through proactive planning, land assembly and government subsidies.134 In other European countries special schemes are being used in areas with high house prices such as the land pooling arrangements in France and
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SOME EASTERN EUROPEAN COUNTRIES, FOR EXAMPLE POLAND, THE CZECH REPUBLIC AND SLOVAKIA, HAVE INITIATED NEW SOCIAL HOUSING PROGRAMS IN RECOGNITION OF THEIR IMPORTANCE FOR MARGINALISED GROUPS IN SOCIETY.
Germany, where landowners have incentives to make land collectively available for housing. Another innovation that protects the value of land and ensures its availability when needed for social housing is the Community Land Trust used in the United States. Planning gains, density bonusing, inclusionary zoning, are other
tools in the planning framework and approval system practiced widely in many cities and countries across European and North American countries to provide land for affordable (often social) housing.135 Several countries have introduced initiatives to supply social housing with more shallow subsidies and private involvement (for example England, Denmark, Ireland, the Netherlands, Finland and Germany). These mechanisms depend on local government supplying free or low-cost land and the use of the planning system to enable land provision. In Dublin, private developers must transfer 20 per cent of new dwellings on large development sites to the city for use as social or affordable housing. Cities such as Munich are also requiring private developers to include a certain percentage of social housing in new developments. In England between 20 and 50 per cent of larger new and regeneration developments must be affordable housing. Many cities, such as Vancouver, have demonstrated the opportunities and benefits of designing and implementing such initiatives (Box 7). In the context of central government cut backs in transition countries, the devolution
Figure 33: Existing social housing stock and rates of new construction in selected European and North American countries, 2004.
40 35 30 25 20 15 10 5
0.5 34 30
23 20 20 20 19 21
18
18 16 17 14 12
3 11
12 9 8 8 7 6 9 6 4
10 7
0 Netherlands Latvia Austria United Kingdom Czech Republic Denmark Finland Sweden France Poland Ireland Belgium Germany Spain Slovak Republic
% of total stock
% of new completions
Source: MoIIR, 2006
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Box 7: Vancouvers strategy to provide land for social housing for 60 years at 75 per cent of market value. In recent years, the City has provided land leases at no cost for some projects. 20 per cent social housing requirement: Since 1988 the City has made it a requirement that major re-zonings of land for multi-household residential use include at least 20 per cent social housing. This policy encourages the creation of balanced communities and provides opportunities for low- and moderate-income households to live in comprehensively planned and usually well located neighbourhoods. Affordable Housing Fund: Established in 1981 by City Council, the Fund provides grants for social housing projects developed on City-owned land. By the end of 2003, City Council had approved over USD 40 million in subsidies from the Fund.
Source: City of Vancouver, Housing Centre, 2007.
Due to its unique geography the City of Vancouver faces significant land supply constraints. This has resulted in it having the highest house prices in Canada and increasing demand for affordable housing. The City has 21,000 units of social housing and several landrelated policies to increase its social housing stock. Lease of City-owned land: Over one-third of all social housing in the City is on City-owned land. Projects primarily serve seniors and families with children. Other projects serve the disabled, low-income singles, aboriginals and youth. They are operated by non-profit housing societies and cooperatives using funds from senior governments. Purchase of sites: In 1981 the City Council made the purchase of privately-owned land for social housing a priority. Generally, the purchased land is leased to non-profit societies and co-operatives
of housing policy responsibilities to local levels of government has created significant challenges for the provision of land for affordable housing. Provision is further constrained by land privatisation, unclear property rights and inefficient land administration systems. The scale of land tenure transformation has been very dramatic, particularly in CIS countries where private ownership over urban land was previously non-existent.136 For example, in the Russian Federation over 50 million people and legal entities have acquired private ownership of land and 129 million hectares of land, comparable to the area of Western Europe, has become privately owned within the space of only four years.137 In addition to a dynamic process of land ownership transformation, the supply of land for affordable housing in Eastern Europe is often constrained by the lack of effective landuse planning to guide development. Evidence suggests that most urban markets have become increasingly fragmented, reflecting differential opportunities for development and profit. Land barter deals, very common at the start of the transition, have lost their attractiveness, and land prices in the capital cities and growth centers have increased considerably. The myriad of ownership arrangements has created significant barriers for the efficient operation of urban land markets which has
contributed to the growth in land prices. In some CIS countries urban land is auctioned by municipalities, reportedly under procedures that are not very transparent. The supply of serviced residential land is also constrained by local governments lack of
TO INCREASE LAND SUPPLY FOR AFFORDABLE HOUSING SOME EUROPEAN COUNTRIES HAVE SPECIAL SCHEMES FOR AREAS WITH HIGH HOUSE PRICES, FOR EXAMPLE THE LAND POOLING ARRANGEMENTS IN FRANCE AND GERMANY WHERE LANDOWNERS HAVE FINANCIAL INCENTIVES TO MAKE LAND COLLECTIVELY AVAILABLE FOR HOUSING.
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Figure 34: Terrace housing in Amsterdam, the Netherlands. Photo UN-HABITAT/Matthew French
capacity to finance necessary infrastructure. Typically, cash-constrained municipalities shift infrastructure costs to the developer. These developments are accompanied by the occupation of agricultural land in the urban periphery and the growth of informal settlements. The combination of inefficient administrative systems and urban poverty has created informal cities on the periphery of cities in countries such as Albania, Azerbaijan, Georgia, Tajikistan, and Serbia, with hundreds of thousands of new residents informally building their houses.138
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SOME EASTERN EUROPEAN COUNTRIES, FOR EXAMPLE POLAND, THE CZECH REPUBLIC AND SLOVAKIA, HAVE INITIATED NEW SOCIAL HOUSING PROGRAMS IN RECOGNITION OF THEIR IMPORTANCE FOR MARGINALISED GROUPS IN SOCIETY.
As a consequence of wide-scale privatisation, the management and rehabilitation of multihousehold housing is one of the largest problems facing municipalities in countries in transition. The problem of inadequate management is a direct result of the lack of institutional capacity and property management structures in place after privatisation. The problem of deteriorating housing stock is a direct result of the systematic failure to carry out repairs and maintenance; and is likely to result in massive structural problems in more than 40 per cent of the urban housing stock. Recently, most countries have introduced laws to regulate the operation of homeowners associations, but the implementation has been very slow and inadequate. The management of privatised multi-household housing has three principal challenges: organisational and technical, social and affordability, and large-scale financial. Organisational and technical challenges The multi-household housing typology inherited from the past poses a critical challenge for housing management in Eastern European countries. The challenge is not only institutional
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Box 8: Multi-household housing in Azerbaijan funds, which contributes to the continued deterioration. The current institutional framework requires both maintenance and capital repairs to be provided by the government through its Housing and Communal Services Departments (ZhEKs). Without adequate financing, however, ZhEKs cannot provide routine maintenance. Instead, they provide a form of catastrophic insurance: for example, if the roof falls in, the ZhEKs will repair or replace it at no charge to the occupants.
Source: World Bank, 2006.
The challenges facing the management and maintenance of low-quality multi-household housing built between the 1960s and 1980s are clearly evident Azerbaijan. While efforts have been made, reforms in housing and communal services remain incomplete. In the early transition years, privatisation of apartments created a new group of owners, who acquired the benefits of apartment ownership without fully assuming the responsibilities that multihousehold housing requires. Maintenance tariffs set by the Government are too low and are not augmented with other
and legal but also, more importantly, related to daily and annual property management. There is a clear consensus: the level of deterioration in the urban housing stock has reached a critical stage. Pre-cast panel construction technologies, which featured prominently in Russia, Lithuania, Bulgaria, Moldova and Romania, resulted in large-scale developments with demanding requirements for their housing management. The initial construction quality of most urban multi-apartment housing was not very high. Consequently, inadequate investment in maintenance as well as deferred capital repairs have aggravated technical problems, such as leaking roofs, obsolete installations, elevators and insufficient wall insulation.139 Furthermore,
the rapid privatisation of the housing stock often transferred ownership of the apartment units to individual households while municipalities were left with the ownership of common parts of buildings and land. The issue is further complicated where there is mixed ownership, for instance in countries such as Latvia, Russia and the Czech Republic where owner-occupiers and tenants live in the same building.140 Studies indicate that despite the effort to establish an adequate legal framework for the operation of homeowners associations, new owners are reluctant to take over these responsibilities. Homeowners associations currently operate in less than 20 per cent of the multi-household stock. Municipal maintenance companies still manage
Figure 35:Housing undergoing rehabilitation as part of the Czech Republic upgrading programme. Photo UN-HABITAT/Matthew French
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THE MULTIHOUSEHOLD HOUSING TYPOLOGY INHERITED FROM THE PAST POSES A CRITICAL CHALLENGE FOR HOUSING MANAGEMENT IN EASTERN EUROPEAN COUNTRIES. THERE IS A CLEAR CONSENSUS: THE LEVEL OF DETERIORATION OF THE PHYSICAL ENVIRONMENT IN THE URBAN HOUSING STOCK HAS REACHED A CRITICAL STAGE AND IMPROVED MANAGEMENT IS LONG OVERDUE.
privatised housing under contractual obligations at locally controlled prices. In addition, the level of housing related services (water, energy services, district heating, garbage collection and waste management) has declined because of subsidy cuts, rapidly escalating costs and massive arrears with respect to utility costs (Box 8). As a result of these processes not only have the housing blocks and public services deteriorated but the backlog of normal maintenance of the housing stock has also accumulated an overwhelming backlog.141 Social and household economic constraints In many cases multi-apartment buildings have a social mix inherited from the previous system of housing allocation. Income and labour market inequalities in recent years, however, have led to an impoverishment of the homeowners, which is one of the reasons for the poor maintenance of multi-household buildings. The cost of housing related services and utilities has increased in real terms, but quite unevenly. Energy costs and central heating costs increased the most, constraining other expenditures. The rapid increase in utility costs in many countries resulted in accumulated arrears. In the absence
of support for housing and utility services, more affluent owners have continued to subsidise their neighbours and to finance urgent repairs. Others have just cut back on individual consumption, such as central heating. Despite different coping mechanisms, arrears are wide spread and a lack of discipline regarding bill payments is common. Studies have reported a lack of respect for the law as well as refusal to pay regular contributions for the maintenance and modernisation of common areas in privatised residential buildings.142 Time series data on housing costs from 1995 to 2005 in Chisinau illustrate these trends (Figure 36). First, costs for housing maintenance and management have remained the same and were not even adjusted for inflation. Second, expenditure on utilities is much higher than spending on maintenance, particularly for water and central heating, which due to elimination of energy subsidies has increased disproportionately in the last few years. Third, the tariffs for maintenance are too low so households do not pay the true costs for services. At the same time, the government lacks sufficient funding to make up the difference. The outcome is inadequate investment to sustain the quality of privatised housig assets. Large-scale financial constraints As noted above, the low quality of multihousehold buildings has reached a critical stage and a major infusion of capital will be needed to bring them back to an acceptable standard. However, a lack of large-scale financing is a major constraint to undertaking the upgrading. While recent years have introduced a budgetary discipline and more transparent and accountable budgetary processes, chronic underinvestment in maintenance has exacerbated the technical challenge. The current stream of revenues does not ensure sufficient funds for renovation and improvement of the building envelope (roof, foundations, elevation, etc). Renovation planning is also problematic within the context of unclear financial and management responsibilities. Furthermore, in addition to the traditional technical and organisational challenges, it is difficult to borrow funds for major improvements. Banks often request
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Figure 36: Service costs versus housing maintenance costs in Chisinau, 1995-2005
3.5 3.0 Cost per (m3) (Lei) (1 Lei =0.34 USD) 2.5 2.0 1.5 1.0 0.5 0 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 Year Water & sewer lei/m3 Natural gas lei/m3 Electricity lei/kWh Housing maintenance lei/m2 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005
individual owners to sign a mortgage or a loan contract, which makes the process extremely cumbersome and costly. Lending institutions have not developed any products for renovation of multi-apartment housing and the high interest rates certainly discourage borrowing. The financing of rehabilitation requires specially designed credit lines and some incentives (tax exemptions, rebates, etc) to facilitate the process. Very few countries have launched programs to assist this process. The Czech Republic is a notable exception, despite the small outreach of its panel renovation programs (see Box 9). The key issue is the mobilisation of funds, savings (including inter-generational savings), loans and mortgages to pay for rehabilitation and renewal. Various mechanisms can be used to encourage financial institutions to develop competitive products (government guarantees, shallow subsidies, insurance). This needs to be complemented by targeted subsidies and reversed mortgages for low-income owners to allow renovation measures to proceed at a large scale for the whole building.
and adequate housing through area-based urban renewal and regeneration programs. Commitments at the national level, particularly in Western Europe, have created a supportive institutional and regulatory framework for local action.143 A large number of local authorities have managed to create coalitions and partnerships to increase the supply of affordable housing and to assist vulnerable groups through urban regeneration projects.144 Local governments, working in partnership with non-profit housing providers and community groups, have experimented with inner city regeneration, brownfield redevelopment, and waterfront redevelopment schemes (for example, see Box 10 and Box 11). The search for effective strategies for urban regeneration that can create a social mix, increase the supply of affordable housing and facilitate investment and improvement of existing infrastructure has promoted new models.145, 146 Urban regeneration has challenged social housing providers to develop a new repertoire of instruments dealing simultaneously with physical deprivation and social exclusion in local communities. This concept had a big impact on French housing policies in the 1990s, re-appearing as a solution to the problem of social exclusion. The central idea was to encourage the sharing of buildings and urban areas, quartiers, by people
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Box 9: Housing rehabilitation programs in the Czech Republic matching funds. Most of the borrowers (85 to 90 per cent) are housing cooperatives and homeowners associations. To date the programmes have assisted the rehabilitation and energy efficient retrofitting of 8 per cent of the panel housing.
Source: Ministry of Regional Development of the Czech Republic, 2007.
In 2001 the Czech Republic launched two programmes that focus on the rehabilitation of multi-household panel housing, which makes up 57 per cent of the housing stock. The programmes support individual projects as well as regeneration of whole panel housing estates. Low-cost credits and subsidies fund up to 70 per cent of the costs, while homeowners, cooperatives and municipalities provide
from different social, cultural and economic backgrounds. The legislative framework has strongly encouraged-principally by taxation mechanisms-local authorities to build 20 per cent social and/or affordable housing for each new housing project.147 In an era of increasing socio-economic polarisation in Western Europe and North America, achieving social inclusion through housing policies has been particularly challenging to implement, as recent experiences in some of the Parisian suburbs and elsewhere in France indicate.148
A NUMBER OF EUROPEAN AND NORTH AMERICAN COUNTRIES ADDRESS THE PROVISION OF AFFORDABLE AND ADEQUATE HOUSING THROUGH AREA-BASED URBAN RENEWAL AND REGENERATION PROGRAMS. COMMITMENTS AT THE NATIONAL LEVEL, PARTICULARLY IN WESTERN EUROPE, HAVE CREATED A SUPPORTIVE INSTITUTIONAL AND REGULATORY FRAMEWORK FOR LOCAL ACTION.
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Urban renewal programs exist in most Western European cities with an aging housing stock and substandard housing in inner city areas. Vienna, Manchester, Copenhagen, Barcelona and Lisbon are well known for their successful soft renewal practices and strategic approaches to the social, economic, cultural, and environmental factors behind the process. Recent urban renewal programs place a particular emphasis on public/ private partnerships as the delivery mechanism as well as on public involvement and participation in defining priorities for the area or neighbourhood. Attempt is made to reduce displacement as well as to avoid forced change of ownership, social segregation and gentrification.149, 150
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Box 10: Dutch urban regeneration: an emphasis on deprived neighbourhoods The national Big Cities Policy assists 18 cities in the Netherlands to respond to problems of high unemployment, crime, polarisation and growing spatial concentrations of low-income households and ethnic minority groups, as well as the physical problems often found in social housing. The Big Cities Policy rests on three pillars: (i) the economy and employment, (ii) the physical infrastructure, and (iii) the social infrastructure. Funding is used in an integrated manner to improve the quality of urban space, to create more jobs and to eliminate social exclusion in neighbourhoods. This area-based approach focuses on deprived neighbourhoods and contributes to social cohesion through measures implemented by residents, government bodies (local authority, police, social welfare organisations), housing associations and local employers. A recent policy shift has targeted 40 neighbourhoods in the four largest cities for the implementation of area-based regeneration measures. In Amsterdam, where more than half of the housing is social housing, non-profit housing associations own 205,000 social rental dwellings. While these are distributed across the city in every district, a fair share is concentrated in post-war neighbourhoods such as the Western Garden Cities and the Southeast of Amsterdam. Over time these areas have become less desirable places to live with social exclusion and poverty manifested in a number of ways, although the housing is in a relatively good condition. The new wave of government investment leverages contributions from the housing associations and aims at creating a social mix of rental and owner-occupied housing. Less popular high-rise apartments in the target neighbourhoods are demolished and replaced by medium density dwellings often in mixed ownership neighbourhood blocks. Housing allowances continue to support low-income households and displacement is managed through reallocation programs of the housing associations active in the neighbourhood.
Source: van Kempen, 2000.
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Box 11: Viennas Urban Renewal Program private rental and owner-occupied. One such example is Gasometre City, a brownfield redevelopment around four large gas tanks that were built in 1899 but have been unused since 1986. The city decided this would be a project to spearhead development in this previous industrial area. The new multi-functional area with 620 units of subsidised housing, 250 student hostel units, 47,100 m2 of commercial space, offices, and a theatre has become the catalyst for the redevelopment of the whole neighbourhood.
Source: www.wien.at
In Vienna, where half of the housing stock is social housing, subsidies are an important aspect of the citys urban renewal program. The amount of subsidies granted for a particular project are dependent on the standard of the existing building, but can be up to 90 per cent of total construction costs. This also includes an allowance for low-income households to reduce short-term costs involved with renovations. The renewal is followed by a controlled and limited rent increase for 15 years to cover any loans required. Any type of building is eligible for a renewal (construction) subsidy, including
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144 Tsenkova, S. (2004) Urban Sustainability in Europe and North America. Calgary: University of Calgary. 145 Kleinhans, R, H. Priemus, and G. Engbersen. (2007). 146 Frster, W. (2006). 80 Years of Social Housing in Vienna. Vienna: City of Vienna Housing Department. 147 Loi SRU (n.d.). Solidarite et Renouvellement Urbain. http://www.legiFrance.gouv.fr/WAspad/UnTexteDeJorf?numjo=EQUX9900145L http://carolinelevron.free.fr/sociologie/loi.sru.memoire.maitrise.socio.rtf 148 Loi SRU (n.d.). 149 Atkinson, R. (2000). Combating Social Exclusion in Europe: The New Urban Policy Challenge. Urban Studies, 37(5-6): 1037-1055. 150 Donner, C. (2000). Housing Policies in the European Union: Theory and Practice. Brussels: European Union.
Figure 37: The London 2012 Olympics site is characteristic of area-based urban renewal approaches where housing is developed on a large scale in conjunction with residential, commercial, retail and entertainment facilities. Photo UN-HABITAT/Matthew French
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Affordability of housing remains the fastestgrowing and most pervasive housing challenge in European and North American countries. Housing costs have increased with significant implications for access to adequate and affordable housing, particularly for vulnerable groups.
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PART FOUR Notable trends, recommendations and conclusions
Figure 38: Much of the contemporary housing stock in the UK is comprised of Victorian low-rise brick terrace housing which is predominately either private rental or owner-occupied. Photo UN-HABITAT/Matthew French
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reportedly much higher than in other regions in the world. Even allowing for definitional changes over time, the available data indicate overall housing improvement since the 1990s. However, the situation with CIS countries is particularly problematic. For example, in Moldova and Uzbekistan improved water services are available in only one third of the stock. A limited share of the housing has bath/ shower-Uzbekistan (13 per cent), Bosnia and Herzegovina (22 per cent), Kyrgyzstan (24 per cent), Moldova and Turkmenistan (30 per cent). Although urban areas reportedly have higher levels of service, close to 3 million people in European cities lack access to piped water and 8 million to sewer and in countries in transition, high connection rates do not necessarily mean good quality of services. Tenure choice Tenure choice is important for long-term housing market stability and access to adequate and affordable housing. Homeownership has grown steadily in most countries, particularly in those in transition. In most of the CEE and CIS countries, owner occupation exceeds 90 per cent, which is well above the 65 per cent average in Western Europe. In fact, some of the poorest countries in the region have the highest rates of homeownership. Analysis of house price dynamics indicates that access to owner occupation has become more expensive, even if it might lead to significant financial benefits over the long term. In a number of countries like France, Germany, Canada and the United States a large share of private rental housing provides options for labour mobility. Tenure choices are much broader in Finland, Sweden, Austria and Denmark thanks to a balanced tenure structure offering a ladder of opportunities ranging from social to private renting to homeownership. By contrast, in several European countries the rental option is severely curtailed, for example Spain, Greece, and Italy. Slums and informal settlements Estimates by UN-HABITAT indicate that about 10 per cent of the urban population in Europe and North America lives in slum conditions without access to basic services and/or in overcrowded dwellings. In UNECE countries
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referred to as Central Asia more than half of the urban population lives in slums. Elsewhere these rates are 30 per cent for Moldova and 19 per cent in Romania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia and Macedonia. Informal settlements have grown rapidly, particularly in the periurban areas of Albania, Serbia, Georgia and Azerbaijan becoming the home of millions of households.
tenure choice tend to have a higher share of households experiencing affordability problems. Furthermore, the situation appears to be more problematic in urban areas where higher prices for housing and concentration of poverty create cumulative disadvantages. Homelessness and the refugee crisis Homelessness across the Europe and North America is a serious challenge and a sign of major failure of governments to deliver affordable housing for all. The total estimate of the homeless population in Europe is close to 600,000 with more than 60,000 people sleeping rough and another 400,000 in homeless shelters. Asylum seekers are another disadvantaged category accounting for over 105,000 in temporary shelters. Although the evidence for CEE countries suggests that homelessness is less significant in quantitative terms, Poland and Hungary seem to have a growing number of homeless people and rising demand for overnight shelters. In the United States more than 750,000 people are reported to be homeless. Internal displacement continues to be a major problem directly related to housing in the Balkans, the Caucasus, Turkey and Cyprus, where the number of IDPs stands at 2.8 million. Serbia and Montenegro still host the largest number of refugees and IDPs in Europe, most of them living in substandard or informal housing. Limited provision of social housing While affordability constraints are growing, less social housing is being provided for low-income households. In Canada and the United States a handful of local governments have had the political will to overcome some of the barriers to development of affordable housing, although the prospects for a meaningful reduction in the number of households with growing affordability problems are low. In Western Europe, the data suggest that in countries where the social housing sector is significant, there is an ongoing commitment to maintain relatively high levels of supply. Austria (30 per cent), Denmark (21 per cent) and Sweden (16 per cent) have the highest rates of new social housing production, followed by Finland, UK and the Netherlands with rates
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in the range of 12 per cent. Several transition countries (Poland, the Czech Republic and Slovakia) have initiated new social housing programs in recognition of their importance for marginalised groups in society. Land shortages for affordable housing The irreversible trends of urbanization and concentration of poverty in some cities have affected housing affordability as well as created significant shortages of land for affordable housing. While land for housing is mostly provided through the market with a variety of long-term urban planning strategies in place to ensure 20 to 25 year land supply for new housing, many high growth regions need coordinated planning by all levels of government in cooperation with civil society and commercial interests to respond to a deepening shortage of land for affordable housing. A number of regional and local governments have experimented with density bonusing, inclusionary zoning, land trusts and land lease arrangements to increase the availability of land supply for affordable (social) housing. Problematic management of privatised multihousehold housing In the privatisation aftermath, the management and rehabilitation of multi-household housing is potentially one of the largest problems facing municipalities in countries in transition, since failure to carry out repairs will result in massive structural problems in more than 40 per cent
of the urban housing stock. Recently, most countries have introduced laws to regulate the operation of homeowners associations, but the implementation has been very slow and inadequate. The management of privatised multi-household housing faces three significant challenges: organisational and technical, social and affordability, and large-scale financial, all of which urgently need to be systematically addressed. Provision of affordable housing through urban regeneration A number of countries in the region address the provision of affordable and adequate housing through area-based urban renewal and regeneration programs. Local governments, working in partnership with non-profit housing providers and community groups, have experimented with inner city regeneration, brownfield and waterfront redevelopment schemes. The search for effective strategies for urban regeneration to create a social mix, increase the supply of affordable housing and facilitate investment and improvement of existing infrastructure has promoted new models and a new repertoire of planning instruments to deal with social inclusion.
4.3 RECOMMENDATIONS
The comparative analysis underpinning this report identified major challenges in the provision of affordable housing in the 56 countries of the
Figure 39: Well maintained multi-household housing in Salzburg, Austria. Photo UN-HABITAT/Matthew French
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UNECE. In particular, it highlights the need for policy responses to address the critical needs of vulnerable, marginalised and low-income groups in a more effective and efficient manner. Despite an overall improvement of housing conditions in most of the countries, lack of progress in several critical areas remains a major concern. There are growing affordability problems, increasing homelessness, limited social housing provision and severe land shortages in high growth areas to accommodate housing provision that is widely affordable to low-income households. Drawing on the experience of different countries and cities in the region, it is clear that housing policy changes are urgently needed to ensure that access to adequate and affordable housing becomes a priority. Despite the fact that comprehensive and long-term changes in housing policies have been, and will continue to be difficult and often controversial, urgent action is needed by national, regional and local governments. In light of the diversity of countries in the region and the specificities of their housing systems it is particularly challenging to provide precise recommendations for change. Instead, the following six broad directions should become a priority in all European and North American countries. Address affordability constraints through propoor land and housing policies Housing affordability remains a considerable housing challenge in Europe and North America. Housing costs have increased with significant implications for access to adequate and affordable housing. Affordability problems are especially problematic in urban areas where higher prices for housing and a concentration of poverty create cumulative disadvantages. Under the new subsidy regime, subsidies focus on and privilege owner-occupation to the detriment of other tenure modalities. Meanwhile, demandbased subsidies to low-income renters have failed to keep pace with the rising housing costs. In most transition countries such assistance is non-existent and where it has been launched (for example The Czech Republic, Poland, Romania, Estonia and Latvia), it is inadequate. A major change in housing policies needs to address affordability constraints of the urban
poor and socially vulnerable groups through an appropriate and targeted subsidy system. Mechanisms for increasing land provision for affordable housing need to be improved. Density bonusing, inclusionary zoning, land trusts and land lease arrangements are promising starts but these must target low-income households and be undertaken in a manner that is financially and socially sustainable. These good practices, in addition to efforts to increase the supply of rental housing through shallow subsidies and/or through incentives for private sector investment, are critical for the improvement of tenure choices and mobility options. These housing policy shifts are particularly critical for countries with polarised tenure systems and high rates of homeownership in the region. Direct provision of new housing units for low-income households should, however, be balanced by promoting the development of housing for middle- and highincome households, which can start vacancy chains and in turn can improve the affordability of the available housing stock overall. Beyond viewing housing as a form of welfare and consumption the housing sector also plays an important part in national and regional economic development. After several decades of debate on what housing might contribute to economic growth, it is now a widely held view that housing is not just a peripheral activity but a central force in sound economic development, much in the same way as investment in transportation, power and communication.151 Housing is therefore much more than providing people a place to live. Housing investment contributes, directly and indirectly, through backward and forward linkages in the economy, to national economic growth and, to a large extend, to national capital stock.152, 153 Housing is a tool for employment creation, providing opportunities to solve the underemployment problem and improve human capital, as well as for improving business capacity and private enterprise to deliver land and housing efficiently and economically.154 Therefore, expanding access to affordable housing through pro-poor housing policies does not only have social or equity benefits but also clear economic benefits where
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IT IS AN INESCAPABLE REALITY: ACHIEVING UNIVERSAL ACCESS TO ADEQUATE AND AFFORDABLE HOUSING WILL NOT SIMPLY HAPPEN BY CHANCE. THE TIME IS NOW FOR GOVERNMENT LEADERSHIP AND ACTION TO ENSURE UNIVERSAL ACCESS TO ADEQUATE AND AFFORDABLE LAND AND HOUSING.
the housing market can contribute to the overall economic development of nations, cities, and households. Housing finance systems should be reformed, where needed. Mortgage interest relief (which does not reach low-income households) should be gradually reduced. Public support should focus more on low-income households by implementing income-related housing support mechanisms, for example housing allowances and housing vouchers. Advance comprehensive approaches to homelessness Homelessness across Europe and North America is a serious challenge. Close to 600,000 people are homeless in the European Union and more than 750,000 in the United States. First and foremost, homelessness needs to be recognised and acknowledged as an issue that needs to be addressed. Fragmented measures to address homelessness need to be integrated, scaledup and developed into long-term national programmes that are implemented at local levels of government. While preventative approaches are particularly important, policy action needs to focus on legislative and funding opportunities to
build a continuum of housing tenure modalities to accommodate a variety of needs, from temporary shelters to permanent, non-profit housing co-operatives. Mobilise global and local efforts to address the housing crisis of refugees and displaced people in the region Across the region, internal displacement continues to be a major problem directly related to housing in the Balkans, the Caucasus, Turkey and Cyprus, where the number of IDPs stands at 2.8 million. A crucial element underpinning the sustainable return of refugees is the effective implementation of the right to property, education, housing, health care and employment as an integral part of the overall strategy of stability in countries affected by the refugee and IDP crisis. Often households have spent more than 15 years in camps and temporary shelters without any hope for sustainable return. Developing housing for so many extremely lowincome households is difficult without multiple subsidies and complex financing packages, and in most countries is clearly beyond the capacity of national or local governments. While there are a lot of different small-scale projects supported by the international community, without capital subsidies to fill the gap, the existing programs cannot adequately serve the poor refugees. Furthermore, other schemes, such as site and services options, might be more appropriate in some cases by mobilising self-help and incremental household investment. Expand the provision of affordable housing through urban regeneration In response to concentration of poverty in certain neighbourhoods and patterns of social exclusion, a number of countries in the region address the provision of affordable and adequate housing through area-based urban renewal and regeneration programs and these should be continued and scaled-up. The practice of local governments working in partnership with nonprofit housing providers and community groups has shown merit in many cases and should be employed beyond its current use in Western Europe. It is acknowledged that this approach to social inclusion through housing policies is
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increasingly difficult in an era of increasing socioeconomic polarisation in many European and North American countries. Nevertheless, it is particularly important to establish mechanisms to share achievements and good practices of promoting the provision of affordable housing through area based urban regeneration. It is encouraging to see that the European Union also increased it financial support for these initiatives through URBAN II European Regional Development Fund contributions and other cofinancing mechanisms such as the Joint European Support for Sustainable Investment in City Areas (JESSICA). Address the problem of management and deterioration of privatised multi-household housing The management and rehabilitation of privatised multi-household housing in Eastern European countries is potentially one of the largest problems facing municipalities in countries in transition. Such housing accounts for a large proportion of the housing stock, in many countries more than 40 per cent. Legal and institutional capacity and financing mechanisms are the two key needs to upgrade and maintain multi-household housing. Countries in transition need to introduce both appropriate legal and institutional policy changes to improve the management and renovation of multi-household housing, as well as launch a combination of mortgages and small subsidy programs to leverage investment by homeowners.
houses of decent quality. It does, however, mean more than leaving housing provision completely to the market; history has shown that the market, and the private housing developers that primarily comprise it cater mainly to upperincome households and do not build housing that is affordable for low- and many middleincome households. Therefore, the time is now for government leadership and action to ensure universal access to adequate and affordable land and housing. A mixed strategy will be benficial in improving housing affordability: increase the provision of housing for middle- and highincome households whilst faclitating the direct production of new housing units for low-income households, with a special focus on income-based housing subsidies. As this volume has examined, compared with Asia, Africa, and Latin America and the Caribbean, European and North American
4.4 CONCLUSION
Adequate housing is a basic human right. Accordingly, it would be acceptable to assume that for people in some of the richest countries of the world this right is met. This is not the case and many people in such countries live without this right fulfilled. They struggle to obtain, retain and maintain dignified, secure, adequate housing that they can afford. It is an inescapable reality: achieving universal access to adequate and affordable housing will not simply happen by chance. Unless national and local governments take a leading role in urban and housing development housing will become increasingly unaffordable for the majority. Taking a leading role does not mean direct provision; history has shown that this does not produce
THE TASK FOR THE COMING DECADE IS FOR EUROPEAN AND NORTH AMERICAN COUNTRIES TO CONSOLIDATE THEIR VALUABLE EXPERIENCES, REFINE THEIR CONSIDERABLE EXPERTISE, AND EXPLORE NEW HOUSING POLICIES AND MODES TO ENABLE THESE COUNTRIES TO SCALE-UP AFFORDABLE HOUSING PROVISION TO REACH ALL HOUSEHOLDS, IN TURN CONTRIBUTING TO ECONOMIC GROWTH AND ENSURING THE FULL REALISATION OF THE BASIC HUMAN RIGHT TO ADEQUATE HOUSING FOR ALL.
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countries present distinctive challenges for affordable land and housing. Affordable land and housing problems in Europe and North America stem from dimensions of affordability that are less prevalent in Africa and Asia. Rising socio-economic inequalities are gentrifying and dividing European and North American cites and making house purchase and rent increasingly unaffordableforlow-andmiddle-income households. The housing stock in most Eastern European countries is comprised of cheap multi-storied apartment blocks, built between the late-1950s and 1980s, which are extensively deteriorated and poorly managed. While households have ownership of such units, many households cannot afford the ongoing service and maintenance expenses. Left unaddressed these dimensions of housing affordability pose a serious problem for European and North American countries. Governments in European and North American countries have largely retreated from providing social housing in favour of enabling the market, yet the market has not provided land and housing that is widely affordable. Housing reforms in Europe and North Americain the past decade have promoted policies to reassert market forces and reduce government intervention. With respect to housing provision, they have emphasised deregulation, private
sector involvement and demand-based subsidies. While the overall goal of these reforms has been to improve the economic and social efficacy of the housing systems, responses across the region demonstrate diversity and substantial differences in housing conditions. The challenge for the coming decade is to build on the strength that underpins the housing sector in these countries. Many European and North American countries have a long history and considerable experience of affordable social housing provision that can be harnessed and learnt from. Likewise, land and housing finance mechanisms are relatively well developed in many countries and this experience and expertise can be scaled-up to reach out to the poorer and less developed member countries. European and North American countries are distinctly urban and urbanization rates are some of the lowest in the world meaning that the challenge is one of consolidation and improvement of quality rather than large-scale new construction. In a rapidly changing world, European and North American countries should consolidate their experiences, refine their considerable expertise, and explore new housing policies and modes. This will enable the region to scale-up affordable housing provision to reach low-income households and ensure the full realisation of their basic human right to adequate housing.
Figure 40: Variation within a typology: Row houses in Oslo, Norway. Photo UN-HABITAT/Matthew French
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Figure 41: Medium-rise multi-houehold housing comprises much of the residential fabric of Spanish cities, such as this example from Madrid. Photo UN-HABITAT/Matthew French
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PART FIVE References
Figure 42: Traditional timber housing in Bergen, Norway. Photo UN-HABITAT/Matthew French
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A
Angel, S. (2000). Housing Policy Matters A Global Analysis. New York: Oxford University Press. Atkinson, R. (2000). Combating Social Exclusion in Europe: The New Urban Policy Challenge. Urban Studies, 37(5- 6): 1037-1055.
B
Baucentrum International (2005). Housing Conditions in High-rise Panel Housing in Europe. Baucentrum: Ministry of Housing, Spatial Planning and the Environment. Boelhouwer, P. and H. van der Heijden. (1992). Housing Systems in Europe: Part 1: A comprehensive study of housing policy. Delft: Delft University Press. Buckley, R. and S. Tsenkova (2001). Housing Market Systems in Reforming Socialist Economies: Comparative Indicators of Performance and Policy. European Journal of Housing Policy, 2: 1-34.
C
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PART FIVE
HOUSING IN CITIES
POLICY GUIDE TO HOUSING FOR INDIGENOUS PEOPLES IN CITIES
INDIGENOUS PEOPLES
United Nations Human Settlements Programme (UN-HABITAT) P.O. Box 30030, Nairobi 00100, KENYA Tel: +254 20 7621 234 Website: www.unhabitat.org
Policy Guide to Secure Land Rights for Indigenous Peoples in Cities (2011) UN-HABITAT and GLTN ISBN Number (Volume 2): 978-92-1-132360-3
A PRACTICAL GUIDE FOR CONDUCTING: HOUSING PROFILES
About this publication This Policy Guide provides policy-makers with the necessary knowledge about the challenges and rights of Indigenous peoples in relation to land and property in the urban context. The Guide sets out how to secure land rights of Indigenous peoples in cities through a human rights framework in the context of urbanization, including migration and urban expansion. This Policy Guide to Secure Land Rights for Indigenous Peoples in Cities builds on earlier guides and is part of a series of UN-HABITAT handbooks focused on the rights of Indigenous peoples. The first policy guide entitled, Housing Indigenous Peoples in Cities: Urban Policy Guides for Indigenous Peoples was published in 2009, followed by a report entitled, Urban Indigenous Peoples and Migration: A review of Policies, Programmes and Practices, published in 2010 and launched at the Fifth Session of the World Urban Forum in Rio de Janeiro.
LAND RIGHTS I N
United Nations Human Settlements Programme (UN-HABITAT) P.O. Box 30030, Nairobi 00100, KENYA Tel: +254 20 7621 234 Website: www.unhabitat.org
C I T I E S
HOUSING PROFILES
United Nations Human Settlements Programme (UN-HABITAT) P.O. Box 30030, Nairobi 00100, Kenya Tel: +254 20 762 3120 Website: www.unhabitat.org
RENTAL HOUSING
A Policy Guide to Rental Housing in Developing Countries (2010) (Volume 1) ISBN: 978-92-1-132327-6
Enabling Shelter Strategies: Design and Implementation Guide for Policymakers (2010) (Volume 2) ISBN: 978-92-1-132334-4
United Nations Human Settlements Programme (UN-HABITAT) P.O. Box 30030, Nairobi 00100, KENYA Tel: +254 20 762 3120 Website: www.unhabitat.org
Condominium Housing in Ethiopia: The Integrated Housing Development Programme (2010) (Volume 1) ISBN: 978-92-1-132326-9
CONDOMINIUM HOUSING IN ETHIOPIA:
The Integrated Housing Development Programme
United Nations Human Settlements Programme (UN-HABITAT) P.O. Box 30030, Nairobi 00100, KENYA Tel: +254 20 762 3120 Website: www.unhabitat.org
European Commission
Housing Profiles
MALAWI
URBAN HOUSING SECTOR PROFILE
United Nations Human Settlements Programme (UN-HABITAT) P.O. Box 30030, Nairobi 00100, KENYA Tel: +254 20 762 3120 Website: www.unhabitat.org
Forthcoming: Uganda (2011), Ghana (2011), Tunisia (2011), Vietnam (2012), El Salvador (2012), Ecuador (2012).
United Nations Human Settlements Programme (UN-HABITAT) P.O. Box 30030, Nairobi 00100, KENYA Tel: +254 20 762 3120 Website: www.unhabitat.org
United Nations Human Settlements Programme (UN-HABITAT) P.O. Box 30030, Nairobi 00100, KENYA Tel: +254 20 762 3120 Website: www.unhabitat.org