Gender differences in the attainment and experience of owner-occupation in Australia
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Smith, Susan J
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Urban Research Program. Research School of Social Science. Australian National University.
Abstract
Australia has one of the world's highest rates of home ownership, not least
because owner-occupied housing is treated favourably both as an investment
and as a consumption good. The residual role of public housing (which
accounts for just 5-6% of the housing stock) and the limited subsidy to
private renters mean that, despite a lack of tax relief on mortgage interest,
the attainment of owner-occupation is widely regarded as a cultural norm, a
wise investment and a mark of success. Accordingly, over 70% of the
population own, or are buying, their homes.
The opportunity to become a home owner in Australia, as elsewhere, has
varied over time (with changes in the availability and affordability of the
owner-occupied housing stock). For any individual, the attainment of
owner-occupation is therefore a function of birth cohort as well as the
consequence of a variety of economic, demographic and life course factors.
The effects of these correlates are, in turn, mediated by gender-a subject
still neglected (especially with respect to two-adult households) in the many
otherwise-excellent accounts of housing affordability, costs and benefits in
the Australian context.
To help redress an imbalance in the literature, this paper explores the
gender dimension of factors associated with home ownership in some detail,
drawing on the surveys o/2547 women and 2182 men conducted in 1986 as
part of the Australian Family Project (AFP). The aim is to describe the
predictors of home ownership and to explore some similarities and
differences in men's and women's routes to, and experiences of. Australia's
dominant tenure. The findings should provide a sound basis for subsequent,
more specialised, analyses of the rich life history data contained in the AFP.
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Open Access
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Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 Australia (CC BY-NC 3.0 AU)
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