Informal meeting of the Social Protection Committee (SPC)
At an informal session of the Social Protection Committee, hosted under Denmark’s EU Council Presidency 2025, Eurofound’s Massimiliano Mascherini presented key findings on social housing, linking to wider work on affordability, adequacy and child welfare.
&w=3840&q=80)
22 September 2025 - 23 September 2025
Event background
Organised by the Ministry of Social Affairs and Housing, under the Danish Presidency of the Council of the European Union, this informal session of the Social Protection Committee(opens in new tab)This link opens in a new tab (an advisory policy committee to the Ministers in the Employment and Social Affairs Council), includes a presentation by Massimiliano Mascherini, Eurofound’s Head of Unit for Social policies, of Eurofound’s findings on the issue of social housing.
Agenda
Eurofound participants
Massimiliano Mascherini
Head of UnitMassimiliano Mascherini har varit chef för enheten för socialpolitik vid Eurofound sedan oktober 2019. Han började på Eurofound 2009 som forskningschef och utformade och samordnade projekt om ungdomssysselsättning, unga som varken arbetar eller studerar och deras sociala inkludering samt om kvinnors deltagande på arbetsmarknaden. År 2017 blev han forskningschef vid enheten för socialpolitik, där han ledde ny forskning om övervakning av konvergens i EU. Förutom arbetet med den europeiska undersökningen om livskvalitet leder han också utarbetandet och analysen av e-undersökningarna om covid-19. Dessförinnan var han vetenskaplig handläggare vid Europeiska kommissionens gemensamma forskningscentrum. Han studerade vid universitetet i Florens, där han studerade aktuariella och statistiska vetenskaper och fick en doktorsexamen i tillämpad statistik. Han har varit gästforskare vid University of Sydney och vid Aalborgs universitet och gästprofessor vid Påvliga akademin för samhällsvetenskap.
Related content
30 May 2023
Unaffordable and inadequate housing in Europe
Unaffordable housing is a matter of great concern in the EU. It leads to homelessness, housing insecurity, financial strain and inadequate housing. It also prevents young people from leaving their family home. These problems affect people’s health and well-being, embody unequal living conditions and opportunities, and result in healthcare costs, reduced productivity and environmental damage. Private tenants have faced particularly large housing cost increases, and owners with mortgages are vulnerable to interest rate increases. In addition, many owners without mortgages, especially in post-communist and southern European countries, experience poverty and housing inadequacy. The cost-of-living crisis affects people in all tenancies. Social housing and rent subsidies support many, but capacity differs across and within countries, and these measures exclude certain groups in vulnerable situations and fail to reach everyone who is entitled to them. Three quarters of Member States have Housing First initiatives – providing housing for homeless people – but these mostly operate on a small scale. This report maps housing problems in the EU and the policies that address them, drawing on Eurofound’s Living, working and COVID-19 e-survey, European Union Statistics on Income and Living Conditions and input from the Network of Eurofound Correspondents.
3 June 2024
European Child Guarantee monitor
13 March 2024
European Child Guarantee monitor
30 May 2023
Unaffordable and inadequate housing in Europe
Unaffordable housing is a matter of great concern in the EU. It leads to homelessness, housing insecurity, financial strain and inadequate housing. It also prevents young people from leaving their family home. These problems affect people’s health and well-being, embody unequal living conditions and opportunities, and result in healthcare costs, reduced productivity and environmental damage. Private tenants have faced particularly large housing cost increases, and owners with mortgages are vulnerable to interest rate increases. In addition, many owners without mortgages, especially in post-communist and southern European countries, experience poverty and housing inadequacy. The cost-of-living crisis affects people in all tenancies. Social housing and rent subsidies support many, but capacity differs across and within countries, and these measures exclude certain groups in vulnerable situations and fail to reach everyone who is entitled to them. Three quarters of Member States have Housing First initiatives – providing housing for homeless people – but these mostly operate on a small scale. This report maps housing problems in the EU and the policies that address them, drawing on Eurofound’s Living, working and COVID-19 e-survey, European Union Statistics on Income and Living Conditions and input from the Network of Eurofound Correspondents.
3 June 2024
European Child Guarantee monitor
13 March 2024
European Child Guarantee monitor
Other events
Explore other Eurofound events.