“…The economic dimension of housing accessibility issues has been brought to public attention in recent decades by several problems that go beyond the state level and involve an integrated economic approach, continental and global: concentrating the population in attractive urban areas from the perspective of supply of jobs and services; lack of physical spaces for residential development in cities; the continuous increase of the sale and rental prices of the houses; low rate of housing construction relative to existing housing demand; the widening gap between income levels coupled with rising housing costs is causing an increasing share of the world's population to feel the financial pressure of housing costs; the differences in the level of development existing between the states of the world and between the regions, localities of the same state; increasing the poverty of the population and drastically limiting the possibilities of access to adequate housing, etc. The combination of rising housing costs and incomes has led, more and more households to devote an increasing share of disposable income to housing [1] and thus be forced to limit their spending on otherlife-relevant issues regarding the quality of life: education, health, culture, entertainment, clothing, etc. These constraints influence, in the first place, personal life, how individuals relate to society and are accepted by it, which generates multiple consequences at a social level (social exclusion, segregation, violence, maladaptation), at economic level (diminishing demand for certain services and goods on the market, limiting access to education, diminishing economic performance) and, in some cases, even at the political level (conflicts, political and economic instability, the inability of the state to implement social and economic policies that lead to an increase in the quality of life and housing).…”