Permanent record · RIR–2068
Integrating Household Economic Factors into National Affordable Housing Policy Frameworks for Low-Income Groups
Malaysia's housing policies have struggled to meet affordability needs despite significant supply efforts. This research examines how policy frameworks can be adjusted to better account for household income and economic volatility.
How can national housing policies be redesigned to better incorporate household income and economic stability factors?
Knowledge gap
What remains worth asking
The source suggests that current policies often exclude critical economic variables, so it remains useful to test the impact of income-indexed housing subsidies.
Potential contribution
Why it may matter
This work provides a basis for more responsive and effective housing policy design in developing economies.
Academic placement
OECD fields and topic tags
Scope: National housing policy implementation in Malaysia. · Method signals: Comparative analysis, Econometric modeling
Possible study pathways
One question, different levels
Public sector housing strategy and financial sustainability
Housing policy evaluation and urban economics
Qualification signal
82/100
- Focuses on policy effectiveness and economic alignment.
- Open-access scholarly source and DOI metadata verified
Provenance
Research Idea Registry curation
- DOI and bibliographic metadata independently resolved
- Open-access status verified
- The research direction is transparently marked as AI-inferred
APA 7 source
Liu, J., & Ong, H. Y. (2021). Can Malaysia’s National Affordable Housing Policy Guarantee Housing Affordability of Low-Income Households?. Sustainability, 13(16), 8841. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13168841
Paper abstract and discussion context; AI-inferred direction
Open source ↗