Abstract
A particular feature of housing provision in Sweden is the significant amount of co‐operative housing (bostadsrätt). While many other countries have co‐operative housing, it rarely accounts for more than a few percent of households. In Finland co‐operative housing has been practically non‐existent. Instead the Finnish system of housing contains another institutional speciality, not found in Sweden: housing company (asunto‐osakeyhtiö) owner occupation, which corresponds to some extent to what in the USA is termed condominiums. This institutional divergence is puzzling because Sweden and Finland resemble each other in their welfare policies and institutional arrangements. This paper explores the puzzle of divergent housing institutions by comparing the early histories of Swedish housing co‐operatives and Finnish housing companies. While both forms of tenure emerged as early 20th century solutions to urban housing crises, their organizational form and social character are rather different. Swedish co‐operative housing grew as a social movement closely connected with the social democratic popular movement coalition, backed by government and local authorities. No such movement existed in Finland, and the element of mutual help soon gave way to speculative activities. With the deregulation of Swedish co‐operative housing the two forms have become more alike, to the extent that both can be considered forms of indirect owner‐occupation. Thus, in terms of tenure there is significant convergence of the two institutions, but nevertheless the social context (social relations of housing) have been and remain rather different.
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