I can see home ownership becoming a human right, provided the chaos currently present in society is not the norm. We have a mountain of issues to surmount first. As technology might also make house making rather "effortless", the "baseline" of roof might be provided, yet conditions would most likely apply.
Indirectly, in many European Nations, they provide benefits which help you rent a house, and therefore, you are getting a house without labor indirectly, with the idea in mind you will recover at some future time and then get on your own feet.
Alternatively, the moment people put this in, you will have invaders and whatever, just coming in to get houses.
In Europe, there are communal house neighborhoods where this ideal is applied, especially for families with many children. It worked, but then migrants etc start coming in to abuse these systems.
Or people permanently decided to do nothing just camp there and the regions do fall rapidly in quality and eventually become like Detroit. Since people who didn't care to even want to rent anything or try, they have found other places for their money, like booze or crack, and then what comes with this goes on further.
There are many policies in place to think of safety nets, but incentive to live and exist is actually necessary for society to move forward. To actually want to have or pay rent for a house, provides incentive for large parts of the population.
Indirectly, in many European Nations, they provide benefits which help you rent a house, and therefore, you are getting a house without labor indirectly, with the idea in mind you will recover at some future time and then get on your own feet.
Alternatively, the moment people put this in, you will have invaders and whatever, just coming in to get houses.
In Europe, there are communal house neighborhoods where this ideal is applied, especially for families with many children. It worked, but then migrants etc start coming in to abuse these systems.
Or people permanently decided to do nothing just camp there and the regions do fall rapidly in quality and eventually become like Detroit. Since people who didn't care to even want to rent anything or try, they have found other places for their money, like booze or crack, and then what comes with this goes on further.
There are many policies in place to think of safety nets, but incentive to live and exist is actually necessary for society to move forward. To actually want to have or pay rent for a house, provides incentive for large parts of the population.