March 16, 2017

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Providing housing for homeless is cheaper and better for society

Governments benefit if they provide housing for the homeless. Credit: University of Melbourne
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Governments benefit if they provide housing for the homeless. Credit: University of Melbourne

It is cheaper to provide last resort housing to homeless people than to leave them sleeping rough, a new report from the University of Melbourne has found.

Each bed provided by the government provides an average net benefit of $10,800 per year, according to the comprehensive cost-benefit analysis, commissioned by the University of Melbourne's Sustainable Society Institute (MSSI). The University partnered with consulting firm SGS Economics and Planning, which undertook the analysis.

"We found that governments and society benefit more than they spend by providing last resort housing to ," said Ellen Witte, director of SGS, the report's lead author. "This is mainly through reduced healthcare costs, reduced crime, and people getting back into employment or education."

"There is much to gain in economic and social terms, both for government and society, by assisting the homeless," Ms Witte added. "The supply of last resort housing has actually dropped in inner Melbourne while demand continues to peak. Demand is primarily driven by housing unaffordability, people escaping domestic violence and a structural lack of social housing."

Brendan Gleeson, director of MSSI and an expert adviser to the report, said:

"Homelessness is getting worse in Melbourne – but the good news is that governments come out ahead if they provide last resort housing for those sleeping rough."

"It's time for governments to step up, provide new housing for the homeless, and make sure that existing emergency housing stays open to those in desperate need."

Key points in the report, "The Case for Investing in Last Resort Housing" and issued by MSSI in March 2017, are:

More information:  The report is available online at: sustainable.unimelb.edu.au/last-resort-housing

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