| Literature DB >> 26364320 |
Rachel Loopstra1, Aaron Reeves1, Ben Barr2, David Taylor-Robinson2, Martin McKee3, David Stuckler4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: It is unclear why rates of homelessness claims in England have risen since 2010. We used variations in rates across local authorities to test the impact of economic downturns and budget cuts.Entities:
Keywords: austerity; homelessness; recession
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26364320 PMCID: PMC5072163 DOI: 10.1093/pubmed/fdv126
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Public Health (Oxf) ISSN: 1741-3842 Impact factor: 2.341
Fig. 1Trends in mean homelessness claim rates across 323 local authorities in England, 2004–12. Notes: Authors' calculations.[34] Austerity denotes beginning of spending cuts in UK, as outlined in initial 2010 Spending Review.[22] Accepted claims: households meeting criteria for statutory homelessness assistance from local authority. Unaccepted claims: households who applied, but did not meet criteria, for statutory homelessness assistance from local authority.
Fig. 2Change in homelessness claim rates between 2009 and 2012 across 323 local authorities in England.
Association of economic and welfare expenditure changes with changes in homelessness claim rates across 323 local authorities in England, 2004–12
| Percentage change in Gross Value Added per capita | −0.029* (0.015) | −0.045* (0.018) |
| Change in unemployment rate | −0.024 (0.019) | −0.0044 (0.021) |
| Percentage change in local authority expenditure | — | −0.083*** (0.011) |
| Percentage change in central government expenditure | — | −0.016 (0.020) |
| Number of local authority-years | 2167 | 2167 |
| 0.0030 | 0.0470 | |
Notes: Standard errors estimated using fixed effects in parentheses clustered by local authority to reflect non-independence of sampling. Number of local authorities = 323.
*P < 0.05, ***P < 0.001.
Association of welfare services and benefit expenditure changes with changes in homelessness claim rates across 323 local authorities in England, 2004–12
| Percentage change in: | |||
| Local authority expenditure | |||
| Housing services | −0.0028** (0.00090) | — | −0.0013 (0.00088) |
| Social care | −0.080*** (0.014) | — | −0.046*** (0.013) |
| Other services | −0.025*** (0.0054) | — | −0.012* (0.0056) |
| Central government expenditure | |||
| Employment and support allowancea | — | 0.11** (0.035) | 0.093** (0.034) |
| Job seekers allowance | — | −0.00086 (0.0035) | 0.0021 (0.0036) |
| Disability living allowance | — | −0.076* (0.037) | −0.056 (0.038) |
| Housing benefit | — | 0.016 (0.021) | 0.013 (0.021) |
| Discretionary housing payments | — | −0.0017* (0.00067) | −0.0016* (0.00069) |
| Council tax benefit | — | −0.015 (0.024) | −0.013 (0.024) |
| Pension credit | — | −0.12*** (0.021) | −0.096*** (0.022) |
| Pension-age disability supportb | — | −0.092** (0.034) | −0.085** (0.033) |
| Number of local authority-years | 2167 | 2161 | 2161 |
| 0.0529 | 0.0960 | 0.1094 | |
Notes: All models adjusted for change in Gross Added Value and unemployment but estimates not shown. Robust standard errors in parentheses clustered by local authority to reflect non-independence of sampling. Number of local authorities = 323.
aIncludes employment and support allowance, incapacity benefit, disability-related income support, and severe disablement allowance for working-age claimants.
bIncludes attendance allowance and severe disability payments for pension-age claimants.
*P < 0.05, **P < 0.01, ***P < 0.001.