-
Female homelessness on International Women’s Day
editor | March 2, 2012On International Women’s Day 2012 Homelessness Australia wants us to remember that women make up almost half of those experiencing homelessness in Australia.
-
Better solutions for dispute resolution
Kay Ransome | February 19, 2012Disputes in strata schemes can and do occur. Chairperson of the Consumer, Trader and Tenancy Tribunal, Kay Ransome, wonders whether there may be a better dispute resolution model.
It is an unfortunate fact of life that disputes in strata and community schemes can and do arise.
The requirement in the present legislation for mediation of disputes is an important step in achieving solutions parties can work with. For matters which do not resolve at mediation, there are currently different paths to determination depending on the type of dispute – an adjudication and a hearing before the Consumer, Trader and Tenancy Tribunal (CTTT).
-
Community Housing regulation: Have your say
editor | December 9, 2011Housing Ministers across Australia agreed to a blueprint for a National Regulatory System for community housing providers.
The proposed system seeks to introduce nationally consistent regulatory arrangements to promote the growth of the community housing sector nationally.
The new system will aim to improve tenant outcomes and protect vulnerable tenants, protect government funding and equity in the sector, and enhance investor and partner confidence.
Please make a public submission or comment on the system design or learn more about the system, which is expected to begin in 2013, at www.nrsch.gov.au.
-
Measuring our quality of life — why is the world looking beyond GDP?
Stephen Bartos | November 1, 2011When the term Gross Domestic Product (GDP) was developed in the 1930s the market value of all goods and services produced within a country was considered to be the best indicator of a country’s standard of living. Now it’s widely recognised that other factors have to be taken into account when looking at a country’s success as a happy, safe place to live. Prof Stephen Bartos, advocates exploring how the ‘economics of happiness’ can be used to inform national policy.
Gross domestic product per capita is a useful, measure of national well-being from an economic perspective.
The severity of the 1930s Great Depression highlighted the need for a tool to assist policy makers to understand the state of their economies, and most importantly whether the policies they had in place were effective.
-
Measuring Australia’s economic and social progress
Stephen Bartos | September 8, 2011Australian measures of life satisfaction have declined in recent years, despite solid growth in GDP. The Global Access Partners Task Force on Progress in Society, established following the 2010 National Economic Review Summit, has been exploring how the ‘economics of happiness’ could be used to inform national policy.
Since last year, a group of senior public sector, private sector and academic thinkers, brought together under the auspices of Sydney-based public policy think tank Global Access Partners (GAP), has been addressing the issue of measures of progress.
-
Measures to start addressing affordable rental housing
Andrew Meehan | November 6, 2008It is now widely accepted that Australia has a huge housing affordability problem. Indeed, rarely a day goes by in the media without discussion of house prices, interest rates, first home buyers, and the lack of affordability.
-
WA Housing Roundtable
Scott Ludlam | November 5, 2008This is a sector that has been in crisis for so long that the word barely holds meaning; people simply should not have to work under this kind of stress and official neglect.
-
Many Faces to the Housing Crisis
Stan Small | October 30, 2008The Government should allocate more resources towards the provision of public and community housing as a matter of urgency. Unfortunately, that's a much harder sell to the electorate than the First Home Buyers Grant.
-
A tax for everything
alison gordon | September 30, 2008If we want to encourage more people to enter the housing market, there needs to be some incentive for them to do so.