A Home of Her Own: Housing and Women
This report shows that housing is unaffordable for women in every English region.
Press Release
New data from our report shows that in Coventry, property prices are 8.5 times women’s median salary, only 5.6 times men’s median salary.
New data reveals housing is unaffordable for women in every English region. In Coventry, the average price of a house is now seven times the average annual wage in the city.
A new report out today from the Women’s Budget Group with Coventry Women’s Partnership, Housing for Women in Coventry, reveals that:
The briefing is published as part of a joint project with Coventry Women’s Partnership and a follow up from the national Women’s Budget Group report AHome of Her Own – housing and women. That report showed that in England women need over 12 times their annual salaries to be able to buy a home compared to eight times for men and that average rents in England took up 43% of women’s average earnings.
Read the full report here.
Housing for Women in Coventry also reveals how changes to social security have led to a growing gap between housing benefit and actual rents.
Women and Homelessness
Author of the Housing for Women in Coventry briefing, Dr Sara Reis, said:
“Housing is one of the most urgent public policy issues in the UK with large number of people pushed into poverty by housing costs or unable to afford to rent or buy. Our report shows that this crisis of housing affordability is far worse for women than for men. Although women and men tend to buy or rent their homes as a couple, women are likely to find themselves unable to afford a home of their own if that relationship breaks down. Not surprisingly the majority of statutory homeless people are women. We are calling on central government to invest in social housing to spread the benefits of the housing safety net more widely and save billions of pounds in housing benefit.”
Christine McNaught, CEO, FWT – a centre for women (lead agency for Coventry Women’s Partnership, said:
“Through the Coventry Women’s Partnership project, we noted an emerging need of women needing support with housing in Coventry and a rise in the numbers of women who were at risk of homelessness. The report evolved from identifying this developing issue. The partners noted that these needs are more apparent when working to support women across the city in practice. When women are facing a housing crisis this is their priority need to move towards safety and security before support can be established to address other barrier and needs.”
Media enquiries:
Thaira Mhearban: thaira.mhearban@wbg.org.uk / 07838 222067/ Communications Officer
Dr Mary-Ann Stephenson: maryann.stephenson@wbg.org.uk / 07957 338582/ Director
About Coventry Women’s Partnership:
Coventry Women’s Partnership is a unique 3-year project, led by FWT – A Centre for women, which has been created with 5 organisations in Coventry to ensure women in the city feel supported, empowered and believed. They want to break down barriers in access to crucial services, and to make support easier. The partnership includes Coventry Haven Women’s Aid, Coventry Rape and Sexual Abuse Centre (CRASAC), Coventry Law Centre and Kairos WWT.
Through referrals across the partnership, they work with women who need support in any of the following areas:
Women’s Budget Group is a research partner, we work with the Coventry Women’s Partnership to evaluate this visionary & innovative project for women in the city.
To find out more about the Coventry Women’s Partnership, please contact:
faye.pettitt@fwt.org.uk or telephone (024) 7663 7693/ (07340) 540659. You can also log on to www.fwt.org.uk.
IFS (2017) The cost of housing for low-income renters Available at: http://bit.ly/2uUVj0t
The Independent (6 Feb 2019) ‘Universal credit claimants “six times more likely” to fall into rent arrears despite government reforms’ Available at: https://ind.pn/2YZVkhi)
The Guardian (18 Aug 2018) ‘No-fault evictions making hundreds of families homeless each week’ Available at: http://bit.ly/2QFPzSg
[4] MHCLG (2018) Rough sleeping in England. Table 2a
MHCLG (2019) Causes of Homelessness and Rough Sleeping – Rapid Evidence Assessment Available at: http://bit.ly/2P1gU0c
WBG (2018) Housing and gender. Calculations based on MHCLG (2018) Livetables on acceptances and decisions Available at: http://bit.ly/2UoWROu
This report shows that housing is unaffordable for women in every English region.
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