Abstract

PurposeThe purpose of this study is to develop new type of reverse mortgage contract. How to provide adequate services and housing for an increasing number of people that are dependent on the help of others is a crucial question in the European Union (EU). The housing stock in Europe is not fit to support a shift from institutional care to the home-based independent living. Some 90% of houses in the UK and 70%–80% in Germany are not adequately built, as they contain accessibility barriers for people with emerging functional impairments. The available reverse mortgage contracts do not allow for relocation to their own adapted facilities. How to finance the adaptation from housing equity is discussed.Design/methodology/approachThe authors have extended the existing loan reverse mortgage model. Actuarial methods based on the equivalence of the actuarial present values and the multiple decrement approach are used to evaluate premiums for flexible longevity and lifetime long-term care (LTC) insurance for financing adequate facilities.FindingsThe adequate, age-friendly housing provision that is appropriate to support the independence and autonomy of seniors with declining functional capacities can lower the cost of health care and improve the well-being of older adults. For financing the development of this kind of facilities for seniors, the authors developed the reverse mortgage scheme with embedded longevity and LTC insurance as a possible financial instrument for better LTC services and housing with care in assisted-living facilities. This kind of facilities should be available for the rapid growth of older cohorts.Research limitations/implicationsThe numerical example is based on rather crude numbers, because of lack of data, as the developed reverse mortgage product with LTC insurance is a novelty. Intensity of care and probabilities of care in certain category of care will change after the introduction of this product.Practical implicationsThe model results indicate that it is possible to successfully tie an insurance product to the insured and not to the object.Social implicationsThe introduction of this insurance option will allow many older adult with low pension benefits and a substantial home equity to safely opt for a reverse mortgage and benefit from better social care.Originality/valueWhile currently available reverse mortgage contracts lapse when the homeowner moves to assisted-living facilities in any EU Member State, in the paper a new method is developed where multiple adjustments of housing to the functional capacities with relocation is possible, under the same insurance and reverse mortgage contract. The case of Slovenia is presented as a numerical example. These insurance products, as a novelty, are portable, so the homeowner can move in own specialised housing unit in assisted-living facilities and keep the existing reverse mortgage contract with no additional costs, which is not possible in the current insurance products. With some small modifications, the method is useful for any EU Member State.

Highlights

  • 1.1 The motivation for this articleIn the European Union (EU), currently, 40 million older people depend on the help of others.This number will increase to 55 million in 40 years

  • As housing is an essential component of welfare strategies for homeowners (Soaita et al, 2017), for the ageing societies, which are subject of our investigation, we join the advice that housing wealth would be an excellent asset to be withdrawn to compensate for reduced income after retirement (De Decker and Dewilde, 2010; Malpass, 2008, Bogataj and Bogataj, 2015, Bogataj et al, 2016) and essential for the long-term care (LTC) provision

  • Our studies show that currently available reverse mortgage contracts lapse when the homeowner moves to assisted-living facilities in any EU Member State, while in our article a new method is developed where multiple adjustments of housing to the functional capacities with relocation is possible under the same insurance and reverse mortgage contract

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Summary

The motivation for this article

In the European Union (EU), currently, 40 million older people depend on the help of others This number will increase to 55 million in 40 years. Rights (Council of Europe, 1950), European member states must implement measures that strengthen the transition from an institutional to community-based facilities and services. The critical issue is how to develop a quantitative model for measuring and forecasting a long-term demand for LTC services and facilities for the elderly and how to plan and finance the assisted-living facilities for seniors with declining functional capacities, which will be available by the demand

Reverse mortgage in the Web of Science literature
The structure of this article
Measuring the care dependency in European Union
Long-term care information system
Actuarial model of long-term care insurance
Numerical example of long-term care insurance for implementation in Slovenia
Optimal transitions among facilities
Modelling flexible reverse mortgage
Numerical example of housing equity withdrawal scheme in Slovenia
Mitigating the risk of longevity
Discussion
Findings
Conclusions and the plan for further research discussion

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