Home bitter home? Gender, living arrangements, and the exclusion from homeownership among older Europeans

Abstract Homeownership is the most important asset among the elderly in Europe, but very little is known about gender and living arrangement differences in this domain. This paper aims at exploring patterns of exclusion from homeownership among middle-aged and older Europeans from a gender perspecti...

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Main Authors: Daniele Vignoli, Maria Letizia Tanturri, Francesco Acciai
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2016-11-01
Series:Genus
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s41118-016-0014-y
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spelling doaj-ca6c5fc0b5af49d4a92774fefb3d07c52020-11-24T23:20:36ZengSpringerOpenGenus2035-55562016-11-0172111810.1186/s41118-016-0014-yHome bitter home? Gender, living arrangements, and the exclusion from homeownership among older EuropeansDaniele Vignoli0Maria Letizia Tanturri1Francesco Acciai2Department of Statistics, Informatics, Applications (DiSIA), University of FlorenceDepartment of Statistical Sciences, University of PadovaDepartment of Sociology, The Pennsylvania State UniversityAbstract Homeownership is the most important asset among the elderly in Europe, but very little is known about gender and living arrangement differences in this domain. This paper aims at exploring patterns of exclusion from homeownership among middle-aged and older Europeans from a gender perspective, and with a special focus on their household composition. The analysis is based on the fourth wave of the “Survey of Health, Aging and Retirement in Europe” and includes a sub-sample of about 56,000 individuals aged 50 or over, living in 16 European countries. We estimated a set of multinomial logit models to examine the probability of being either tenant or rent-free occupiers versus homeowners. Our findings show that women are generally more likely to be excluded from homeownership than men. Nevertheless, a closer look suggests that the gender gap in homeownership is essentially generated by compositional differences between men and women, with the most relevant factor being household type. Older women are almost as twice as likely as men to live alone, which is associated—other things being equal—with a particular low likelihood to be homeowners virtually in every European country.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s41118-016-0014-yHomeownershipGenderLiving arrangementsElderlyEuropeSHARE
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Daniele Vignoli
Maria Letizia Tanturri
Francesco Acciai
spellingShingle Daniele Vignoli
Maria Letizia Tanturri
Francesco Acciai
Home bitter home? Gender, living arrangements, and the exclusion from homeownership among older Europeans
Genus
Homeownership
Gender
Living arrangements
Elderly
Europe
SHARE
author_facet Daniele Vignoli
Maria Letizia Tanturri
Francesco Acciai
author_sort Daniele Vignoli
title Home bitter home? Gender, living arrangements, and the exclusion from homeownership among older Europeans
title_short Home bitter home? Gender, living arrangements, and the exclusion from homeownership among older Europeans
title_full Home bitter home? Gender, living arrangements, and the exclusion from homeownership among older Europeans
title_fullStr Home bitter home? Gender, living arrangements, and the exclusion from homeownership among older Europeans
title_full_unstemmed Home bitter home? Gender, living arrangements, and the exclusion from homeownership among older Europeans
title_sort home bitter home? gender, living arrangements, and the exclusion from homeownership among older europeans
publisher SpringerOpen
series Genus
issn 2035-5556
publishDate 2016-11-01
description Abstract Homeownership is the most important asset among the elderly in Europe, but very little is known about gender and living arrangement differences in this domain. This paper aims at exploring patterns of exclusion from homeownership among middle-aged and older Europeans from a gender perspective, and with a special focus on their household composition. The analysis is based on the fourth wave of the “Survey of Health, Aging and Retirement in Europe” and includes a sub-sample of about 56,000 individuals aged 50 or over, living in 16 European countries. We estimated a set of multinomial logit models to examine the probability of being either tenant or rent-free occupiers versus homeowners. Our findings show that women are generally more likely to be excluded from homeownership than men. Nevertheless, a closer look suggests that the gender gap in homeownership is essentially generated by compositional differences between men and women, with the most relevant factor being household type. Older women are almost as twice as likely as men to live alone, which is associated—other things being equal—with a particular low likelihood to be homeowners virtually in every European country.
topic Homeownership
Gender
Living arrangements
Elderly
Europe
SHARE
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s41118-016-0014-y
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