Social Housing Finance for
Housing the Poor ?
The need for affordable housing for the relatively poor.
In many countries, including the UK and USA, acceptable housing
cannot be afforded by lower-income families unless subsidised rent
'affordable housing' or 'social housing' is made available. Developers
of new social housing face the financial problem of somehow subsidising
their rents, as with housing grants or maybe using cheaper prefabricated
housing.
Rent Subsidy Grants.
The USA and some other countries subsidise affordable housing
only with rent subsidy grants, for which there may often be severe
competition.
Housing Development Grants.
In other countries like the UK new social housing is subsidised
chiefly by up front development grants. There the main grant funders
now favour fewer bigger developers, and there is increasing grant
bidding competition for such housing development grants.
Bidding for Housing Grants.
Affordable housing developers need successful bidding strategies
for grant applications, and they often need to be appropriate to
changing bidding situations. Needed new affordable housing or 'social
housing' will generally only be developed if the developers, subsidy
providers and all others involved are satisfied that a proposed
new development project is financially viable and is good value
for money as well as being for needed housing.
Demand for Social Housing.
Some areas of a country may get excessive demand for affordable
housing while others get unsustainable low demand. This can happen
when social rents are set way below low-market rents in some areas
and close to low-market rents in other areas - especially when
low-income families face relocation difficulty that prevents natural
market corrections from working.
Social Exclusion in Social Housing.
Social housing development for the poor will tend towards concentrating
unemployed, welfare dependant and problem families in a disadvantaged
socially excluded sub-society. And this often involves housing
problems for the landlord which can include non-sustainability
needing appropriate social inclusion strategies.
Social housing developers will generally need some good financial
calculation system for new project appraisal often an appropriate
Excel calculator spreadsheet. And other calculator spreadsheets
may have other uses, as to help show if prospective tenants can
afford a particular property. These systems may be developed in-house,
but can often be developed much more cheaply by a specialist.
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Vincent Wilmot currently lives in Grimsby UK and has several interesting
websites including http://www.vincentwilmot.com
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