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Australian renters have been disproportionately affected by COVID-19 facing income loss, the inability to pay rent, tenure insecurity and eviction risk and a new AHURI publication provides a stark analysis of the impacts of these unprecedented challenges.
Twenty leading thinkers from housing, economics, policy, urban planning, and epidemiology have explored the results from a survey of 15,000 renting households for the publication Rental Insights: A COVID-19 Collection released today.
Interestingly, while each of the contributions to this Collection differ, a series of 'echoes' exist between the stories, which should almost certainly demand the community's attention:
"The COVID-19 pandemic has provided a stark reminder of how we are housed—where we are located, the quality, security and amenity of our housing—impacts on our health, wellbeing and economic productivity," says Professor Emma Baker from The University of Adelaide, lead author of the publication.
"When the pandemic emerged, and the economic lockdown hit, researchers across Australia rapidly collaborated to understand the impacts on Australia's housing market," says Dr. Michael Fotheringham, Managing Director of AHURI. This collection of insights from some of the country's leading experts will be significant in informing rapid policy development and supporting national recovery."