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Welfare benefits not enough for rent

Call for policy revamp after study finds most people on housing subsidy have to make up cash shortfall each month for small, subdivided flats

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Welfare recipient Yeung Suan says the government should increase subsidies. Photo: Dickson Lee

More than half of those who live on welfare payments have to fork out money from their own pockets for rent as the government subsidy they receive is not enough, a survey has found.

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The survey, conducted by the CSSA Alliance, also found that more than 70 per cent of the 100 respondents polled were living in subdivided flats.

Their average living area was about 158 sq ft, the study found.

In the survey conducted from early June to July 20, about 56 per cent of the respondents said the government subsidies they received covered only part of their rent and that they had to make up the cash shortfall on their own each month.

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Two-thirds of those polled also said that their landlords had increased their rents, some by as much as 29 per cent.

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