The effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of homelessness prevention and assistance programs
Summary
This project provides an analysis of the incremental benefits and whole-of-government budgetary costs of both providing and not providing assistance to homeless people and those at risk of becoming homeless. The study is focused on Western Australia, and involves collaboration with various government departments in analysing administrative source data.
Project Number: 80306
Research Theme: Homelessness
Project Leader: Flatau, Paul
Funding Year: 2005
Research Centre: Western Australia
Research & Policy Bulletin
Issue 104: The cost-effectiveness of homelessness programs
Homelessness programs produce positive outcomes for their clients at relatively low cost and can reduce health, justice and police expenditure.
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174 KB PDF Document
Description
The aims of this project are to:
- Assess the costs and benefits of programs designed to assist families who are homeless or who are at risk of becoming homeless.
- Estimate the accommodation, health, well-being, education and training, labour market, justice and income support costs to families, service providers, government and the broader community of not undertaking programs designed to assist both homeless people and those at risk of becoming homeless,
- Provide evidence on the outcomes per unit costs of homelessness intervention strategies and the Federal and State whole-of-government program budget costs of not intervening to provide support for homeless people.
This proposal addresses the priority research question: What are the whole of government costs and benefits of not preventing homelessness including, for example, in relation to health, crisis accommodation, policing, criminal justice and housing assistance? The project will provide service agencies and Federal and State Departments and bodies (e.g., the Commonwealth Advisory Committee on Homelessness, the WA State Homelessness Strategy Monitoring Committee, the SAAP Coordination and Development Committee (CAD)) with firm evidence of the benefits and costs of both providing assistance (of different forms) and not providing assistance to homeless families and families at risk of becoming homeless.
The study’s geographical scope is the Perth metropolitan area and the regional towns and cities of South-West Western Australia (e.g., Mandurah, Busselton). The target population consists of families at risk of becoming homeless or who are in a primary (improvised dwellings, living in the streets), secondary (those in temporary accommodation or in emergency or transitional accommodation) or tertiary homelessness (living in boarding houses). The research design of the study includes the following elements: Program enumeration and classification. Federal and State Government and agency programs that assist homeless families and those at risk of becoming homeless will be listed and cross-classified against their target group, the departments/agencies responsible for funding, administering, and delivering the program and areas of potential direct client impact. Homeless families’ needs, program take-up and utilisation and outcomes.
A Homeless Family Survey will be administered in face-to-face interviews with families. The Survey will contain modules on housing histories, needs, program take-up and utilisation and housing/shelter, income support, primary health, mental health, substance abuse, social relationship/functioning, justice, labour market and education and training and quality of life outcomes. A Service Provider Survey will also be administered to service provider agencies. This information will be supplemented with semi-structured interviews. Primary research evidence from these two sources will be supplemented by existing administrative client data, evidence from AIHW SAAP data and current research evidence from service providers. Program costs and non-intervention costs.
Homelessness program cost data will be derived from consultations with the Project Advisory Group, FaCS, program and service providers, the WA State Homelessness Strategy Monitoring Committee and from administrative data sources (e.g., the SAAP National Data Collection). In terms of whole-of-government budgetary impacts, the project will co-ordinate with the WA Department of Premier and Cabinet, Treasury and the FaCS at the Federal level in the assessment of the impact that non-intervention may have on the government’s budgetary position. Cost-effectiveness estimates: Estimates will be derived of the mean cost of providing assistance to homeless and at-risk families and of not providing assistance. Mean benefits per unit cost will be estimated for the assistance and non-assistance cases. A Project Advisory Group has been established for the present project comprising members from service provider agencies.
More Information
Research and Policy Bulletin: Issue 104: The cost-effectiveness of homelessness programs
174 KB PDF Document
Final Report: No. 119: The cost-effectiveness of homelessness programs: a first assessment - appendices
1.8 MB PDF Document
Positioning Paper: No. 092: The effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of homelessness prevention and assistance programs
814 KB PDF Document
Final Report: No. 119: The cost-effectiveness of homelessness programs: a first assessment
1.4 MB PDF Document

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