1.5 million Hungarian people live in pauperage

Change language:
According to Pénzcentrum.hu, millions of Hungarians live in damp low comfort-level homes, and they cannot afford renovation. 80 percent of the 4.4 million residential real estates in Hungary are insufficient regarding modern engineering and energetics criteria. This means that most Hungarians live in different levels of housing poverty and there is no way out. The several smaller problems that the housing poverty consists of creates a vicious circle that affect low-income households the most.
Not only homeless people and run-down neighbourhoods far from Budapest are troubled. This year Habitat for Humanity Hungary has shown its seventh annual report concerning housing poverty.
It came to light that two-to-three million people in Hungary live in different types of housing poverty and the position of tenants is also very unreliable.
1.5 million people live in houses with serious quality issues.
People living in these crowded and damp homes do not have enough money to afford repairs. From the 4.4 million residential real estates in Hungary 80 per cent are under the modern engineering and energetics benchmarks, meaning that the cost of accommodation for most Hungarians and their quality of life are negatively affected by the physical attributes of their homes.
Every third household has wealth issues concerning their housing. This means that they need to spend an irrationally large amount of their salary on overhead, rent, or loan. These significant expenses then lead to debt. Currently, 1.4 million (approximately one-third of the) households have taken out some type of loan, at least 13 per cent of the homes have arrears that are over 60e days, while 750 000 enforcements are being in progress. The amount of these enforcements are as much as 7 per cent of the annual GDP of the country. In the light of these facts, it is understandable why there is almost a dozen eviction daily and why we still cannot declare the (foreign currency based) loan-crisis issue settled – as announced at the presentation of the Annual report.
[button link=”https://dailynewshungary.com/high-rent-low-number-of-rooms-nowhere-to-stay-for-hungarian-students/” color=”red” newwindow=”yes”] HIGH RENT, LOW NUMBER OF ROOMS: NOWHERE TO STAY FOR HUNGARIAN STUDENTS[/button]
The report of Habitat for Humanity deems those households having housing poverty that have either affordability or quality issues, are below the average energy-efficiency, or are areally or legally more impaired or vulnerable than average households. Usually, a family living in housing poverty befits more of these criteria at once.
Conservative approximation, therefore, suggests that 2-to-3 million people live in housing poverty across the country, meaning that they experience (m)any of the issues mentioned above.
There is no way out of this vicious circle
The main statement of the 2018 report – like previous ones – is that the housing crisis in Hungary only deteriorates. Alongside this issue, the quality of available homes is very poor, while the energy-efficiency and overhead-price issue in correlation create the biggest obstacle. Although the government has spent more on housing problems in the last few years than previously, it mainly had an impact only on middle-or higher-class households. Unfortunately, the support, which is not based on neediness, is nine times higher than the one concerning social basis.
It is important to note that several smaller problems together create a vicious circle that we may call the trap of housing poverty. Those who are born into it or fall into it have a really hard time getting out.
Lower income, in other words, more impoverished households are disadvantageous in several dimensions. Issues relating to energy-efficiency affect them more deeply, the probability of such households located in areas of the country where certain quintessential services are unavailable is much higher, and they are legally more vulnerable compared to other homes.
This trap also creates a spatially visible pattern as well. While the inner districts of Budapest and other bigger cities, as well as the holiday areas, show an increase in value, tens of thousands of people are trapped in the periphery, and hundreds of thousands of other people are cornered into the sparse countryside.
The relevant data for the first half of 2017 and 2018, as well as our own experience, show no positive change concerning how the government tackles problems connected to housing. The intent to create a comprehensive policy to mitigate social differences is yet to be seen, and the coordination of the housing issues between several departments is also insufficient – as stated by Zsolt Szegfalvi, the Executive Director of Habitat for Humanity Hungary





