Measuring housing affordability: Scoping the real cost of housing

Lower-income households make trade-offs to afford their housing costs but most of these are not accounted for in the housing affordability measurements used by policy makers, according to new AHURI research. As a result, housing can appear affordable even though it is of such poor quality it affects...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Crowe, Adam, Rowley, Steven
Format: Report
Published: Australian Housing and Urban Research Institute 2024
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/96049
_version_ 1848766082976841728
author Crowe, Adam
Rowley, Steven
author_facet Crowe, Adam
Rowley, Steven
author_sort Crowe, Adam
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Lower-income households make trade-offs to afford their housing costs but most of these are not accounted for in the housing affordability measurements used by policy makers, according to new AHURI research. As a result, housing can appear affordable even though it is of such poor quality it affects people’s health, it is too expensive to heat or cool or it is located far from employment opportunities so that householders have very high commuting costs. The research reviewed government policies and practices and investigated Australian case studies to better understand the quality, energy, and locational and transportation dimensions of housing affordability. The findings point to the need for a universally applied definition of safe and healthy housing standards across Australia and the need for policy makers to measure households’ required energy expenditure, rather than their actual energy expenditure. The research case studies also reveal the relationship between housing affordability and locational advantage or disadvantage, that is being close to, or far from, employment, education, health facilities and cultural amenities. The research stresses that integrating housing, planning, transport and employment policies is critical to mitigating the risks of housing affordability stress and displacement for lower income householders, while offering increased accessibility to key resources and services. There is a need for programs to encourage private landlords to provide well-located, good quality, affordable rental housing. Furthermore, for low-to-moderate-income householders living in locationally disadvantaged areas, expanding transport assistance schemes can help to reduce transport costs and improve residents’ connection to job-rich areas.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T11:45:30Z
format Report
id curtin-20.500.11937-96049
institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T11:45:30Z
publishDate 2024
publisher Australian Housing and Urban Research Institute
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling curtin-20.500.11937-960492025-01-07T02:38:31Z Measuring housing affordability: Scoping the real cost of housing Crowe, Adam Rowley, Steven Lower-income households make trade-offs to afford their housing costs but most of these are not accounted for in the housing affordability measurements used by policy makers, according to new AHURI research. As a result, housing can appear affordable even though it is of such poor quality it affects people’s health, it is too expensive to heat or cool or it is located far from employment opportunities so that householders have very high commuting costs. The research reviewed government policies and practices and investigated Australian case studies to better understand the quality, energy, and locational and transportation dimensions of housing affordability. The findings point to the need for a universally applied definition of safe and healthy housing standards across Australia and the need for policy makers to measure households’ required energy expenditure, rather than their actual energy expenditure. The research case studies also reveal the relationship between housing affordability and locational advantage or disadvantage, that is being close to, or far from, employment, education, health facilities and cultural amenities. The research stresses that integrating housing, planning, transport and employment policies is critical to mitigating the risks of housing affordability stress and displacement for lower income householders, while offering increased accessibility to key resources and services. There is a need for programs to encourage private landlords to provide well-located, good quality, affordable rental housing. Furthermore, for low-to-moderate-income householders living in locationally disadvantaged areas, expanding transport assistance schemes can help to reduce transport costs and improve residents’ connection to job-rich areas. 2024 Report http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/96049 10.18408/ahuri8128801 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ Australian Housing and Urban Research Institute fulltext
spellingShingle Crowe, Adam
Rowley, Steven
Measuring housing affordability: Scoping the real cost of housing
title Measuring housing affordability: Scoping the real cost of housing
title_full Measuring housing affordability: Scoping the real cost of housing
title_fullStr Measuring housing affordability: Scoping the real cost of housing
title_full_unstemmed Measuring housing affordability: Scoping the real cost of housing
title_short Measuring housing affordability: Scoping the real cost of housing
title_sort measuring housing affordability: scoping the real cost of housing
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/96049