Dostopna stanovanja
Slovenia should again become a place where its younger generations have the possibility to become homeowners or have access to affordable housing.
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In the 1990s the Housing act laid the foundation for a newly independent Slovenia to transition from government-owned housing to private ownership. As a result, 75% of the population today live in their own homes. However, with housing prices increasing by over 86% between 2015 and 2023 (compared to 48% across the EU) due to a host of homemade issues, owning a home in Slovenia today is all but a dream for younger generations. Just as home ownership has scientifically proven positive effects on residential stability, the lack of access to affordable housing contributes to a lack of perspective and emigration incentive. Slovenia prides itself for its education system, but if graduates leave the country because job opportunities are unsatisfactory and real-estate is unattainable, we are contributing to our country’s brain drain and demise.
Volt would like Slovenia to again become a place where its younger generations have the possibility to become homeowners or have access to affordable housing. We propose the following:
Social housing
Begin building capacities to manage dwellings on behalf of owners and introduce compulsory renting of empty dwellings in high-demand zones similar to the UKs empty dwelling management order.
Introduce a preemptive purchase right in case of sales or inheritances in high-demand zones. While reverting to pre-independence public housing like in Vienna is out of the question, a certain public social housing stock to exert downward pressure on rents will be beneficial.
Construction
Speed up construction permits and accelerate permission for the conversion of industrial wastelands into construction zones, including a tacit approval for permits not issued after a fixed duration similar to France.
Ensure zoning laws and urbanisation plans incorporate social mixity as a criteria with a minimum of social housing units based on urban density for any new construction project to avoid gentrification and ghettoisation.
Introduce a preemptive purchase right for undeveloped land for municipalities and develop projects as public-private partnerships with municipalities setting reasonable upper limits for construction prices/m² to ensure construction follows actual demand for housing.
Rental market
Further limit the number of dwellings an owner can offer over AirBnB and similar platforms in zones under pressure to avoid situations like in Venice or Barcelona where residents are forced out of cities in favour of short term rentals.
Follow the Dutch affordable housing act making rental contracts unlimited by default and introduce a home valuation system that takes into account quality criteria to define maximum rents.
Capital markets
Introduce a progressive property tax that increases based on the number of owned and empty dwellings to disincentivize acquiring real estate and leaving it empty. 24% of housing stock in Slovenia is sitting empty and should be brought to the market.