A two-year study into a pioneering financial education project has found that it helps to slash the number of evictions – the leading cause of homelessness in the UK.
The innovative Money House project, run by financial education charity MyBnk, sees care leavers learn the skills, knowledge and confidence to live independently as they head to flats in Greenwich and Newham to learn about budgeting and finance. The course has been such a hit that it is now mandatory for all young people applying for social housing with four London councils as well as sheltered housing providers like Centrepoint, the YMCA and Depaul.
It doesn't have to be this way. We can prevent #HomelessnessinEngland – see @TheMoneyHouse_https://t.co/KGOzNuw2S9
— MyBnk (@MyBnk) December 21, 2017
The Big Issue featured the project in our evaluation of financial education back in September but now independent evaluators have carried out to assess its impact.
After asking nearly a thousand 16-25 year olds in care or sheltering housing for their thoughts, it was revealed that participants were now three time less likely to slip into rent arrears and there was a 64 per cent drop in evictions for those at risk of losing their home.
This is a significant impact in an area where one in three care leavers lose their first home, costing £7,056 to evict a tenant. On that metric, The Money House has already found more than £300,000 in direct savings. And as for the Housing Association Charitable Trust’s social value model, for every £1 spent, there is £3.36-worth of social value.