be and feel like we own our home. Few in Europe have more desire to own their home than the English. The rent we still think we throw money. Eurostat data for 2009 collected by the Economic Research Institute (EEI) indicate that 83.2% of English homes are owned and the rest (only 16.8%) for rent.
The figure is well above the average EU-27 , which stands at 73.5%. Spain is at one end of the sample, on the other hand, countries as Austria, where over 57% of homes are owned.
Eurostat data show that Spain is an outlier within the EU because it is one of the countries with higher levels of home ownership, sharing this place, in general terms, states RAMs and that in the past were part of the Soviet bloc.
From Romania to Austria
So, ahead of Spain in terms of home ownership on the housing stock, stood Romania (96.5%), Lithuania (91%) , Hungary (89.8%), Slovakia (89.5%), Estonia (87.1%), Estonia (87.1%), Latvia (87.1%) and Bulgaria (86.8%).
Below 83.2% in Spain, Slovenia met (81.3%), Malta (79.2%), Czech Republic (76.6%), Greece (76.4% ), Portugal (74.6%), Finland (74.1%), Cyprus (73.8%) and Ireland (73.7%), all above the European average (73.5%).
The list, in descending order, is completed by Belgium (72.7%), Italy (72.5%), Luxembourg (70.4%), United Kingdom (69.9%) Sweden (69.7%), Poland (68.7%), Netherlands (68.4%), Denmark (66.3%), France (63%) and Austria (57.5%). The statistics do not provide data for Germany, who is also his country with a high proportion of rental housing.
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