Post Occupancy Evaluation of Housing Subsidy Beneficiaries

Post Occupancy Evaluation of Housing Subsidy Beneficiaries
Author: Clinton Ohis Aigbavboa
Publisher: LAP Lambert Academic Publishing
Total Pages: 292
Release: 2012-05
Genre:
ISBN: 9783848483563

South Africa is one of the countries in the world that has delivered the highest number of houses to the poor through various delivery mechanisms. This was done to fulfil her vision of adequate housing for all, as reflected in the National Housing Policy framework. Over the last seventeen years, the African National Congress led government has vigorously ensured that essential services were made available to advance the lives of the people. Since 1994 about 3 million houses have been delivered, providing more than 13 million people with secure homes. One of the housing strategies, as contained in the National Housing Policy is to provide subsidy assistance to low income groups to enable them to become home owners and improve their quality of life. The Housing Subsidy Scheme, has to date helped reduce the housing backlog. This publication advances knowledge on the post occupancy experience of housing subsidy beneficiaries, by exploring what beneficiaries do with the subsidized houses; if the subsidized houses have improved their lives etc. At a general level, the study contributes to efforts at improving low-income housing delivery in South Africa.

Housing Vouchers

Housing Vouchers
Author: E. Jay Howenstine
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Total Pages: 211
Release: 2017-09-04
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 1351514873

Outside the United States, the idea of a consumer housing subsidy is a highly developed concept. Housing allowances, shelter allowances, rent allowances - or rent rebates as they are called - have been paid out on a larger scale for longer periods of time on an entitlement basis, with a much greater variety of rationales than in the United States. As the United States moves ahead with its demonstration program, it is timely to examine and evaluate foreign experiences with the consumer housing approach.E. Jay Howenstine addresses common questions that have puzzled many policymakers: How do consumer housing subsidies work? For tenants? Homeowners? Builders? And government officials? Gathered here is the definitive experience of the countries that have employed them. From Australia to the United Kingdom, here is the reality gleaned from a dozen countries and brought to bear on the United States. Both the virtues and the limitations of the approach are presented in detail for everyone interested in housing.This study is divided into three major parts. First, Howenstine reviews the historical background and analyzes housing allowance strategies that foreign governments have adopted. A second part examines in detail the major principles and elements with which governments have fashioned their systems. The third part examines the impact of housing allowance systems and weighs them in the light of the original objectives. Conclusions are also drawn about foreign experiences: Should financial assistance to low-income families be in the form of consumer housing subsidies or producer housing subsidies, or some synthesis of the two systems? Should the housing allowance be maintained as a separate housing policy, or should it be integrated into a general income maintenance policy? This book addresses an increasingly prominent portion of the housing market.

Compendium of Research Reports

Compendium of Research Reports
Author: United States. Department of Housing and Urban Development. Office of Policy Development and Research
Publisher:
Total Pages: 206
Release: 1981
Genre: Housing
ISBN:

National Evaluation of the Supportive Housing Demonstration Program

National Evaluation of the Supportive Housing Demonstration Program
Author: Mark L. Matulef
Publisher: DIANE Publishing
Total Pages: 208
Release: 1995-07
Genre:
ISBN: 9780788119941

This evaluation of the SHDP provides strong support for the creation of a flexible block grant to aid the homeless. Perhaps the best designed of the many HUD-administered McKinney homeless assistance programs, SHDP consisted of two distinct initiatives: the Transitional Housing Program for homeless individuals and families, and the Permanent Housing Program for homeless persons with disabilities. This report provides a comprehensive summary of the many achievements of the program, which was succeeded by the Supportive Housing Program in 1992.