owner-occupied housing - meaning and definition. What is owner-occupied housing
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What (who) is owner-occupied housing - definition

STATUS OF A PERSON WHO OWNS THEIR HOME
Owner occupier; Home ownership; Homeowner; Owner occupied; Owner Occupied; Home ownership rate; Homeownership; Home owner; Owner occupancy; Owner-occupant; Owner-occupier; Home-ownership; Home buyer; Homebuyer; Owner-occupied home; Owner-occupied
  • Percentage of owner-occupied units in urban areas, by country

Owner-occupancy         
Owner-occupancy or home-ownership is a form of housing tenure in which a person, called the owner-occupier, owner-occupant, or home owner, owns the home in which they live. The home can be a house, such as a single-family house, an apartment, condominium, or a housing cooperative.
homeowner         
home owner         
also homeowner (home owners)
A home owner is a person who owns the house or flat that they live in.
N-COUNT

Wikipedia

Owner-occupancy

Owner-occupancy or home-ownership is a form of housing tenure in which a person, called the owner-occupier, owner-occupant, or home owner, owns the home in which they live. The home can be a house, such as a single-family house, an apartment, condominium, or a housing cooperative. In addition to providing housing, owner-occupancy also functions as a real estate investment.

Examples of use of owner-occupied housing
1. The ECB has urged a reform of harmonised European inflation statistics to include consumer spending on owner–occupied housing.
2. One reason was the fav–ourable tax treatment given to owner–occupied housing, it said, with the introduction of real estate investment trusts likely to make the supply and demand imbalance worse.
3. "You don‘t get ministers going to leafy areas like Surbiton and saying: ‘There‘s too much owner–occupied housing here, we want to build a council estate.‘" Some hope that by breaking down physical barriers in deprived areas, economic divisions will also come down.
4. Friedman said that removing the implicit government guarantee or shrinking the firms could change lending risk assessments and "the whole mechanism we built up over the past 30 years for channeling savings into debt against houses is going to have to be either reconstituted or the market will charge a higher interest rate." He said that would mean fewer homes would be bought and built and there would be a change in "the ethos of the United States," which has always valued owner–occupied housing.