Transcript
Page 1: What Future for Evidence Based Housing Policy Under  Neoliberalism ?  Insights from Australian Experience

What Future for Evidence Based Housing Policy Under Neoliberalism? Insights from Australian

Experience

Andrew BeerCentre for Housing Urban and Regional Planning

The University of Adelaide

Page 2: What Future for Evidence Based Housing Policy Under  Neoliberalism ?  Insights from Australian Experience

Agenda

• Australia as a neoliberal nation• Housing under neoliberalism • Australian housing policy under neoliberalism

– Case study one: the National Rental Affordability Scheme

– Case study two: (Re)counting the homeless• The future of evidence based policy• Conclusions

Page 3: What Future for Evidence Based Housing Policy Under  Neoliberalism ?  Insights from Australian Experience

Australia as a Neoliberal Nation • Australia

– A ‘liberal’ welfare regime (Epsing Anderson 1990)• And a Federation, not a unitary state

– Deregulation of the economy and working conditions from the mid 1980s under the Hawke/Keating Governments

– Election of the deeply conservative Howard Coalition Governments from 1996-2007

– Limited political or Treasury ‘buy in’ to housing programs and assistance despite the programs of the Rudd Labor Governments from 2007-10

• Australia therefore as a model for the UK, post the Cameron election

Page 4: What Future for Evidence Based Housing Policy Under  Neoliberalism ?  Insights from Australian Experience

Australia as a Neoliberal Nation: Public Sector Outlays as a Percentage of GDP

0

5

10

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25

30

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40

45

1965

1967

1969

1971

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1975

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1981

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1987

1989

1991

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1995

1997

Year

Per C

ent o

f GDP

Australia

OECD Total

OECD America

OECD Europe

Page 5: What Future for Evidence Based Housing Policy Under  Neoliberalism ?  Insights from Australian Experience

Australia as a Neoliberal Nation • Key dimensions of Australian neoliberalism

– A preference for market based solutions to questions of economy and society

• Eg outsourcing of employment services• A ‘workfare’ state that does not accept persons out of paid

employment • Larner (2005) notes that neoliberalism does not reduce public sector

outlays, simply reshapes those outlays– Importantly, a reliance on the housing market to accommodate

the population, and limited direct intervention• Unless forced by politics • Public housing as anathema, as seen to discourage labour force

participation

Page 6: What Future for Evidence Based Housing Policy Under  Neoliberalism ?  Insights from Australian Experience

Australian Housing Policy Under Neoliberalism

• Where Have all the Houses Gone?Mal Brough, Minister for Family and Community Services, 2007

Page 7: What Future for Evidence Based Housing Policy Under  Neoliberalism ?  Insights from Australian Experience

Where Have all the Houses Gone?Mal Brough, Minister for Family and Community Services, 2007

Figure 1. Total Stock of Public Housing in Australia, 1999-2000 to 2004-05.

385000

390000

395000

400000

405000

410000

1999-2000 2000-01 2001-02 2002-03 2003-04 2004-05

Year

Tota

l Sto

ck o

f Pub

lic H

ousi

ng

Source: Department of Family and Community Services, Housing Assistance Act 1996,

Annual Report, Various Years.

Page 8: What Future for Evidence Based Housing Policy Under  Neoliberalism ?  Insights from Australian Experience

Australian Housing Policy Under Neoliberalism

• Significant policy failures:– Reduction in social housing supply and escalating

waiting lists – Rampant affordability problems in the major Australian

capital cities – Significant under-supply of housing relative to

need/demand (NHSC 2009 & 2011)– Indigenous housing

• Overcrowiding• Home ownership rate half that of non Indigenous Australians

Page 9: What Future for Evidence Based Housing Policy Under  Neoliberalism ?  Insights from Australian Experience

Policy Failure:Percentage of Households in the Bottom 40 Per Cent of the Income Distribution Paying 30

Per cent or More for their Housing

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5

10

15

20

25

30

1996 2001 2006

Census Year

Per C

ent

Per Cent of Low IncomePurchasing Households

Per Cent of Low Income TenantHouseholds

Page 10: What Future for Evidence Based Housing Policy Under  Neoliberalism ?  Insights from Australian Experience

Policy Failure: Percentage of Households in the Top 60 Per Cent of the Income Distribution Paying 30 Per cent or More for their Housing

0

5

10

15

20

25

1996 2001 2006

Census Year

Perc

enta

ge o

f Hou

seho

lds

Number of Upper IncomePurchasing Households

Number of Upper Income TenantHouseholds

Page 11: What Future for Evidence Based Housing Policy Under  Neoliberalism ?  Insights from Australian Experience

Australian Housing Policy Under Neoliberalism

• Neoliberalism only allows one solution– But what happens when that solution fails?– Productivity Commission (2004) noted structural

causes underpinning affordability problems • But rejected by Treasury

• Anne Tiernan and Terry Burke – Kingdon’s Garbage-Can theory of policy

• But who is to take out the garbage?• Who is to replace the garbage?

Page 12: What Future for Evidence Based Housing Policy Under  Neoliberalism ?  Insights from Australian Experience

Australian Housing Policy Under Neoliberalism

• Case study - the National Rental Affordability Scheme (NRAS) – Government subsidies to private landlords to

provide new rental properties at 80% of market rent

• Subsidies for 10 years• Loosely based on an Australian interpretation of

European models • Much researched topic – Gavin Wood, Nicole Gurran

etc

Page 13: What Future for Evidence Based Housing Policy Under  Neoliberalism ?  Insights from Australian Experience

Australian Housing Policy Under Neoliberalism

• NRAS – Product of a coalition of industry groups,

academics and social welfare activists who united under the title “Australians for Affordable Housing”

• Fronted by Julian Disney – Kevin Rudd in 2007 committed to providing 50,000

NRAS dwellings by 2010• Added another 50,000 as part of the Nation Building

Economic Stimulus package of 2008-09– With Treasury as the leading proponent

Page 14: What Future for Evidence Based Housing Policy Under  Neoliberalism ?  Insights from Australian Experience

Australian Housing Policy Under Neoliberalism

• High level of take up of NRAS properties– Pressure to extend the scheme and concerns over

the 10 year time horizon – But current pressure comes from outside

government, not from internal voices • Current priority of the Federal Government is to return

the budget to surplus (May) in 2012-13• But other opportunities for initiatives will arise in later

fiscal years, especially 2013-14 as the government moves to elections

Page 15: What Future for Evidence Based Housing Policy Under  Neoliberalism ?  Insights from Australian Experience

Australian Housing Policy Under Neoliberalism

• ‘Homelessness as a national shame’

• Addressing homelessness as part of a social inclusion agenda

• Substantial commitment of funds under the NAHA – A specific National Partnership -

$800m– The Road Home – aims to halve

overall homelessness • Which raises some very interesting

policy challenges around enumeration

Page 16: What Future for Evidence Based Housing Policy Under  Neoliberalism ?  Insights from Australian Experience

Australian Housing Policy Under Neoliberalism

• (Re) Counting the Homeless– Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) releases an estimate of

homeless population on Census night using a method developed by Chamberlain and McKenzie

• Conventionally around 100,000ish, in 2006 – 105,000– ABS has always worked hand in hand with Chamberlain and

McKenzie and publish the estimates – The Road Home brings that estimate into greater focus

• From 2009 the ABS began to revisit the homelessness numbers – Produced a new methodology and estimate based on the 2006

Census of 64,000 persons

Page 17: What Future for Evidence Based Housing Policy Under  Neoliberalism ?  Insights from Australian Experience

Australian Housing Policy Under Neoliberalism

• Recounting the homeless creates a policy conundrum:– 64k or 105k who knows? But many care

• For the Gillard Labor Government it looks like ‘lies, damn lies and statistics’

• Recounting the homeless emphasises the political context of research findings– The recount is a liability for the Gillard Labor Government – But potentially and asset for an Abbot Coalition

Government

Page 18: What Future for Evidence Based Housing Policy Under  Neoliberalism ?  Insights from Australian Experience

The future of evidence based policy

• Context – Neoliberalism contains an embedded paradox: the

more it emphasises market based solutions, the more likely public expenditure decisions will be based on political imperatives

– Neoliberal governments enter government with ideological positions that fail

• There is no Plan B

Page 19: What Future for Evidence Based Housing Policy Under  Neoliberalism ?  Insights from Australian Experience

The future of evidence based policy

• Where does the future lie for evidence based policy and research in housing: – In being part of the process that takes garbage in and

garbage out• HomeStart • Competing and contesting policy agendas

– In working with a coalition of like-minded actors • Industry, civil society institutions, academia • In anticipating the deficits in current policy settings and in

anticipating the need to both monitor and develop alternatives

Page 20: What Future for Evidence Based Housing Policy Under  Neoliberalism ?  Insights from Australian Experience

The future of evidence based policy

• From a researcher’s perspective – It is an environment that is more chaotic but with

greater opportunities • Number of housing researchers in Australia has grown

– Greater diversity of research partners as ‘big society’ policies generate larger welfare institutions

Page 21: What Future for Evidence Based Housing Policy Under  Neoliberalism ?  Insights from Australian Experience

Conclusions

• Neoliberalism changes housing policy– It is not a change for good

• It generates new opportunities for researchers– but fewer for policy makers in government service

• It is possible to get good outcomes for those in housing need, but the pathways are now more arduous, more complex and require multiple partners


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