Statistics Explained

Archive:Housing conditions

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Data from August 2012, most recent data: Further Eurostat information, Main tables and Database. This article analyses recent statistics on housing conditions in the European Union (EU). One of the key challenges of Europe 2020 and in particular the poverty and social exclusion element, is to provide decent, in terms of quality and cost, housing for everyone. The cost and quality of housing is key to living standards and well-being. Shortage of adequate housing is a long-standing problem in most European countries. Over the last decade, worsening affordability, homelessness, social and housing polarisation and new forms of housing deprivation have been an increasing concern for public policy.

Figure 1: Distribution of population by dwelling type, 2010
(% of population) - Source: Eurostat (ilc_lvho01)
Figure 2: Distribution of population by tenure status, 2010 (1)
(% of population) - Source: Eurostat (ilc_lvho02)
Figure 3: Housing cost overburden rate, 2010
- Source: Eurostat (ilc_lvho07a) and (ilc_lvho07a)
Table 1: Housing cost overburden rate by sex, age and tenure status, 2010
(% of specified population) - Source: Eurostat and ilc_lvho07c/default/table?lang=en (ilc_lvho07a and ilc_lvho07c)
Figure 4: Overcrowding rate, 2010
(% of specified population) - Source: Eurostat ilc_lvho06/default/table?lang=en (ilc_lvho05a, ilc_lvho06)
Figure 5: Overcrowding rate by poverty status, 2010
(% of specified population) - Source: Eurostat (ilc_lvho05a)
Figure 6: Housing deprivation rate – EU27, 2010
(%) - Source: Eurostat (ilc_mddd04b)
Table 2: Proportion of the population with housing problems or deprived of some housing items by poverty status
(% of specified population) - Source: Eurostat ilc_mdho02, ilc_mdho03 andilc_mdho04/default/table?lang=en (ilc_mdho01, ilc_mdho02, ilc_mdho03 andilc_mdho04)
Figure 7: Severe housing deprivation rate by poverty status, 2010
(% of specified population) - Source: Eurostat (ilc_mdho06a)
Table 3: Proportion of the population suffering from problems in the residential area
(% of specified population) - Source: Eurostat lc_mddw02 and lc_mddw03/default/table?lang=en (ilc_mddw01, lc_mddw02 and lc_mddw03)


Main statistical findings

Type of dwelling and Tenure status

In 2010, 41.8 % of the EU-27 population lived in flats, 34.4 % in detached houses and 23.0 % in semi-detached houses. The share of persons living in flats was highest in Latvia (65.4 %), Estonia and Spain (both 64.5 %). The share of people living in detached houses peaked in Slovenia (67.3 %), Hungary (64.5 %), Romania (61 %) and Denmark (59.2 %); Norway and Croatia also reported high shares (62.4 % and 72.9 % respectively) of persons living in detached houses. The highest propensity to live in semi-detached houses was reported in the Netherlands (60.7 %), the United Kingdom (60.3 %) and Ireland (58.3 %) – see Figure 1.

Over one quarter (27.9 %) of the EU-27 population lived in an owner-occupied home for which there was an outstanding loan or mortgage, while somewhat less than half (42.9 %) of the population lived in an owner-occupied home without a loan or mortgage. As such, a total of close to two thirds (70.8 %) of the population lived in owner-occupied dwellings, while 17.8 % lived in dwellings with a market price rent, and 11.4 % in reduced-rent or free accommodation.

More than half of the population in each EU Member State (see Figure 2) lived in owner-occupied dwellings in 2010; the share ranged from 53.2 % in Germany to 97.5 % in Romania. In Switzerland people living in rented dwellings outweigh those living in owner-occupied dwellings (55.7 % of the population are tenants). In Sweden (68 %), the Netherlands (59.5 %) and Denmark (52.7 %) more than half of the population lived in owner-occupied dwellings with an outstanding loan or mortgage; this was also the case in Iceland (67.6 %) and Norway (61.1 %).

The share of persons living in rented dwellings with a market price rent in 2010 was less than 10 % in 12 EU Member States, as well as in Croatia. In Germany, Denmark, the Netherlands, Sweden, Luxembourg and Austria more than one quarter of the population lived in rented dwellings with a market price rent. The share of the population living in a dwelling with a reduced price rent or occupying a dwelling free of charge was less than 20 % in all Member States.

Housing affordability

In 2010, 10 % of the EU-27 population lived in households that spent more than 40 % of their disposable income on housing (see Figure 3). In Denmark, Greece, the United Kingdom, Romania and Switzerland Housing cost overburden rate exceeded 14 %, while the lowest rates were reported by Cyprus (2.5 %) and Malta (3.3 %). Housing affordability varies between different groups in the society. Overall women are more vulnerable to housing cost overburden than men in most of the EU Member States and at EU27 level (Table 1). This trend is especially evident in Greece and the Czech Republic, where overburden rates are by 3.1 percentage points higher for women than for men in both countries, and in Switzerland (difference of 3.9 percentage points). No clear trend is apparent for age in what regards housing affordability; although at EU27 level housing cost overburden rate is higher by around 1.2 percentage points for both categories of young people (below the age of 18) and for people in the 18-64 age group compared to the elderly (over the age of 65), this is not a rule for all countries. The largest though difference was reported by Spain (difference of 7.4 percentage points between the ’18-64’ age group and the elderly) and also by Switzerland and Croatia (differences of 14.4 and 9.7 percentage points respectively).

The proportion of the population whose housing costs exceeded 40  % of their equivalised disposable income was higher for owners with mortgage than owners with no outstanding mortgage or housing loan, with the exceptions of Greece, Sweden, Bulgaria and Switzerland. For tenants it is reasonable to have higher rates for those having to pay rents at market price compared to tenants with rent at reduced prices. The only exception here applies to Sweden, where tenants with rents are reduces prices suffering from housing overburden rate are more than double those with rents at market price (14.9 % and 31.8 % respectively).

Housing quality - Overcrowding

One major element of the quality of housing conditions is the availability of sufficient space in the dwelling. The indicator that has been invented to describe space problems is the Overcrowding rate, defined as the proportion of people living in an overcrowded dwelling, as defined by the number of rooms available to the Household, the household’s size, as well as its members’ ages and family situation. In 2010 the highest rates in the total population of households (Figure 4) were observed in Latvia (57.1 %), Romania (54.9 %) and Poland (47.5 %), while the lowest in the Netherlands (2 %) and Cyprus (2.8 %). The EU27 average is 17.6 %.

Figure 4 presents countries in descending order of overcrowding rate split into two groups, those where single households decrease total overcrowding rate and those where single households increase overcrowding rate. In the EU as a whole overcrowding rate is higher by 1.1 percentage points if singe person households are excluded from the computation of the indicator. However, exceptions are Sweden, France, Luxembourg, Denmark, Iceland, Germany, Switzerland, Finland, Norway, Belgium and the Netherlands, where the inclusion of single-person households increases the overcrowding rate (e.g. very small flats - studios are inhabited by one person). However, in these countries overcrowding rates are relatively small.

Overcrowding rate is overall higher for those being at risk-of-poverty (i.e. people living in households where equivalised disposable income per person was below 60  % of the national median) compared to total population. Figure 5 presents countries in descending order of percentage difference between the two groups. Indicatively, at EU level overcrowding rate for those at-risk-of-poverty is 29.4 % while for the total population it is 17.6 % (difference of 11.8 percentage points). Largest differences between the two groups are observed in Hungary (difference of 22.5 percentage points) and Czech Republic (difference of 21.6 percentage points) and the smallest in Malta, Croatia, the Netherlands, Cyprus, Spain and Ireland with percentage differences lower than or equal to 4 percentage points.

Housing quality – Housing deprivation

Housing quality can also be assessed by looking at other housing deficiencies, such as lack of certain basic sanitary facilities in the dwelling (such as a bath or shower or indoor flushing toilet) and problems in the general condition of the dwelling (leaking roof or dwelling being too dark). In 2010 (Figure 6), 77.9 % of the Europeans (EU27 average) declared not to be materially deprived for the 'housing dimension' (Material deprivation), 16.6 % suffer from one of the dwelling problems, 4.3 % suffer from two, 0.9 % suffer from three and 0.3 % suffer from all four of them (i.e. leaking roof/damp walls/floors/foundation or rot in window frames AND accommodation being too dark AND no bath/shower AND no indoor flushing toilet for sole use of the household). In Bulgaria, Latvia, Romania, Lithuania, Hungary, Estonia, Poland and Portugal a larger portion of the population is deprived for the housing dimension compared to the EU average, while Iceland, Norway, Switzerland, Netherlands, Denmark, Spain, Luxembourg and the United Kingdom report that nobody suffers from more than two problems.

The main problem perceived at EU level is ‘leaking roof’ (i.e. leaking roof or damp walls, floors or foundation, or rot in window frames of floor') (16 %), followed by ‘darkness of the dwelling' (6.8 %) (Table 2) while less than 3.5 % of the EU population lacked basic sanitary facilities (i.e. lack of bath/shower or indoor flushing toilet). Exceptions to this EU trend are Romania, Latvia, Bulgaria, Lithuania and Estonia where sanitary problems are equally or more frequent that the other two housing problems mentioned above. In Spain and the Netherlands nobody reports to be lacking basic sanitary facilities. At the other extreme, about 40 % of the people in Romania had no bath or shower, or no indoor flushing toilet (38.9 % and 40.8 % respectively).

Overall people at-risk-of poverty suffer more than the total population for these certain housing problems (or are deprived to a greater extent than the total population for the particular items). Especially in Romania the deficiency of basic sanitary facilities is extremely frequent; 78.2 % of the at-risk-of poverty population do not have a bath or shower and 79.7 % do not have indoor flushing toilet. The situation is somewhat better, but still bad, in Bulgaria where those lacking indoor flushing toilet account for 60 % of the at-risk-of-poverty population and those lacking a bath or shower account for 45.4 % of the at-risk-of-poverty population. In Hungary and Slovenia almost half of the at-risk-of-poverty population suffer from ‘leaking roof’.

Insufficient spacing and poor amenities are those chacteristics used to define severe housing deprivation. In 2010, severe housing deprivation rate in the EU is 5.7 % and it is more than double that figure (13.7 %) for the population being at-risk-of poverty (Figure 7). Highest rates are exhibited by Romania (26.9 %) and Latvia (22.6 %). The severe housing deprivation rate is below 1 % of the total population in the Netherlands, Ireland and Finland. In Romania more than 54 % of the population at-risk-of poverty face severe housing deprivation.

Severe housing deprivation rate is 1.4 to 3.7 times (for EU27 it is 2.4 times) larger for the population at-risk-of poverty compared to the total population. The discrepancy is even larger in Norway, where the rate is 6 times larger for the at-risk-of-poverty population.

Housing quality – Problems in the residential area

Housing quality depends not only on the quality of the dwelling itself, but also on the wider residential area. In this case the indicators rely on the subjective opinion of the respondents, but they do have the advantage of drawing a more complete picture of housing.

In 2010, 20.6  % of EU-27 population lived in a dwelling where noise from neighbours or from the street was perceived as a problem (Table 3). Over 30  % of people in Romania were concerned with noise, followed by Cyprus (29.1 %), Malta (27.1 %) and Germany (25.7  %). At the other extreme, the rates were lowest in Ireland (9.5  %) and Estonia (11.0 %).

In 2010, 14.8  % of the EU-27 population perceived the area in which they live as affected by pollution, grime or other environmental problems. At country level the figures ranged from less than 10  % in Ireland, Sweden, Denmark and Finland to over 30  % in Malta.

Crime and/or vandalism were perceived as a problem by 14.4  % of the EU-27 population. At country level the rates were highest in Bulgaria (27.7  %), Latvia (23.8  %) and the United Kingdom (23.1  %), while only 5.2  % of the population in Lithuania and 6.5  % in Poland considered this to be a problem. Rates were also small for Iceland (3.7 %) and Norway (5.5 %).

For the population at-risk-of-poverty, these rates were overall higher. At EU-27 level the largest difference of 3.7 percentage points between the total population and the population at-risk-of-poverty concerns crime, violence and vandalism, while the largest difference (of 1.2 percentage points) concerns pollution. Noise lies between the two (2.8 percentage points).

Data sources and availability

The data used in this section are primarily derived from micro-data from EU statistics on income and living conditions (EU-SILC). The reference population is all private households and their current members residing in the territory of the Member State at the time of data collection; persons living in collective households and in institutions are generally excluded from the target population. The EU-27 aggregate is a population-weighted average of individual national figures.

Context

Questions of social housing, homelessness or integration play an important role within the EU’s social policy agenda. The charter of fundamental rights stipulates in Article II-94 that ‘in order to combat social exclusion and poverty, the Union recognises and respects the right to social and housing assistance so as to ensure a decent existence for all those who lack sufficient resources, in accordance with Community law and national laws and practices’.

However, the EU does not have any responsibilities in respect of housing; rather, national governments develop their own housing policies. Many countries face similar challenges: for example, how to renew housing stocks, how to plan and combat urban sprawl, how to promote sustainable development, how to help young and disadvantage groups to get onto the housing market, or how to promote energy efficiency among house owners.

Further Eurostat information

Publications

Main tables

  • Living conditions and welfare (t_livcon), see:
Income and living conditions (t_ilc)
Income distribution and monetary poverty (t_ilc_ip)
Living conditions (t_ilc_lv)

Database

  • Living conditions and welfare (livcon), see:
Income and living conditions (ilc)
Living conditions (ilc_lv)
Material deprivation (ilc_md)

Dedicated section

Methodology / Metadata

Source data for tables, figures and maps (MS Excel)

Excel.jpg Housing statistics: tables and figures

Other information

  • Regulation 1177/2003 of 16 June 2003 concerning Community statistics on income and living conditions (EU-SILC)
  • Regulation 1553/2005 of 7 September 2005 amending Regulation 1177/2003 concerning Community statistics on income and living conditions (EU-SILC)
  • Regulation 1791/2006 of 20 November 2006 adapting certain Regulations and Decisions in the fields of ... statistics, ..., by reason of the accession of Bulgaria and Romania

External links

See also