Future trends in housing tenure and the adequacy of retirement income
Citation:
Slaymaker, Rachel and Roantree, Barra and Nolan, Anne and O'Toole, Conor, Future trends in housing tenure and the adequacy of retirement income, Economic and Social Research Institute, 2022Download Item:
Abstract:
In recent years, Ireland has experienced a notable decline in homeownership and
a rise in the proportion of households in private rental accommodation.
Concurrently, the cost of both rents and house prices have risen markedly and
affordability challenges in terms of meeting housing costs have been well
documented. While these challenges are immediate in terms of the housing costs
burden, a longer-term issue arises as to how renting households will manage the
financial adjustment to retirement with ongoing rent payments. This transition
historically in Ireland has been smoothed by high homeownership rates and
mortgage amortisation which lowered the cost of housing payments and increased
financial assets. Indeed, existing international evidence suggests that being a
homeowner can provide a ‘double dividend’ of lowering housing costs and
increasing assets in retirement. This can help manage changes to income in
retirement and allow households to maintain their standard of living.
The continued requirement to cover housing costs for renters in retirement can be
seen as an additional vulnerability in terms of retirement income adequacy in
Ireland, over and above the general concern of sufficient pension income. While
considerable research to date has documented this well-known challenge of
providing a sufficient standard of living in retirement for many households in
Ireland, the drop in the homeownership rate layers an additional complication in
terms of the policy challenge.
To address these related issues, this report explores indicative future paths for
homeownership rates in Ireland and explores the impact in terms of income
poverty in retirement. Using data from the Survey on Income and Living Conditions
(SILC) and the Irish Longitudinal Study on Ageing (TILDA), we consider a number of
scenarios to assess the possibility of renting households becoming homeowners,
and then test the impact on income poverty rates if households were to continue
to have rental costs into retirement.
Sponsor
Grant Number
Other
Pensions Council
Author's Homepage:
http://people.tcd.ie/broantreDescription:
PUBLISHED
Author: Roantree, Barra
Publisher:
Economic and Social Research InstituteType of material:
ReportCollections
Availability:
Full text availableSubject (TCD):
Inclusive SocietyDOI:
https://doi.org/10.26504/rs143Metadata
Show full item recordLicences: