They ain't reading them words, lol.
Okay, and what's the negative?
Man. They have more faith in her than any of us. Bless Newsmax for carrying on hope for Kamala.
Okay, and what's the negative?
There is consensus among economists that rent control reduces the quality and quantity of rental housing units.
Okay, and what's the negative?
Keeping big business from robbing us all blind is against everything Jesus stood for. Don't you remember how he threw the poor out of the temple for bothering the moneychangers?
Okay, and what's the negative?
It's utterly baffling how a movement based on being for the people, for the silent majority, for the honest humble struggling folk, and all that, will also scaremonger on things only the richest elite hoarders of a nations wealth would have objections to.
Okay, and what's the negative?
That may be so, but there never seem to be that many poor landlords.I am open to be proven wrong but rent control seems to not work.
This merely suggests that landlords are more likely to sell and/or let properties fall into disrepair if they're not making huge enough profit from them. Which are issues to be ameliorated by 1) regulation (quality) and 2) supply (quantity). The answer isn't to just let landlords fleece tenants in the hope their better nature will then convince them to remain functional landlords.There is consensus among economists that rent control reduces the quality and quantity of rental housing units.
I am open to be proven wrong but rent control seems to not work.
No, this is a consensus in economics, period.Those consensus are from "hand of the free market" true believer economists,
Generally there's a modern economic consensus that price controls broadly are bad, for reasons of distorting supply & demand. Yet market forces are already transparently inadequate for fulfilling demand in this area and keeping it attainable and equitable.No, this is a consensus in economics, period.
Economists across the board are skeptical or outright hostile to rent control, including plenty of politically left-leaning ones we might otherwise applaud. Sure, economics might not be a natural science with the same level of objective reality to test, but I have severe concerns about arguing that any intellectual discipline is spouting unconsidered dogma just because it disagrees with our political views. Or, if rent control today, why not evolution and vaccines tomorrow?
However, "rent control" can also represent potentially a degree of different measures and strengths, and will work within a wider frame of housing policy. So a more nuanced argument could be that rent control is generally bad, but could be applied carefully, in the right situation, as an effective tool to deal with some housing problems.
Overall, property rent profits are, I believe, considered roughly equivalent with other businesses, ~5%. This makes sense, economically-speaking: if they were less profitable, people would prefer other ways to make money rather than rent, and vice versa. Thus they are not necessarily outrageous in wider context, although obviously there will be a tail at the higher end of the distribution. In many cases, I wonder whether landlords might actually be making more wealth from rising property values than in profits from rent itself.Besides which, in the modern world, landlords are already making absolutely exorbitant profits without even needing to fulfil their basic obligations.
I'd suggest that might be heavily weighted by business property rental. I know for a fact that the rent in my area is colossally larger than the mortgage repayments on equivalent (and even much better) properties, and I've had a string of landlords now that also make no investments in basic maintenance.Overall, property rent profits are, I believe, considered roughly equivalent with other businesses, ~5%. This makes sense, economically-speaking: if they were less profitable, people would prefer other ways to make money rather than rent, and vice versa. Thus they are not necessarily outrageous in wider context, although obviously there will be a tail at the higher end of the distribution. In many cases, I wonder whether landlords might actually be making more wealth from rising property values than in profits from rent itself.
I have other issues with rent, but let's leave those aside for the moment.
They might. But the core arguments put forward by the formative economists on this topic, like Friedman, are unconvincing and have also gone quite unchallenged for decades.An economist doesn't necessarily weight QoL or poverty - but a poorly functioning economic system is liable to deliver both poverty and low QoL anyway. (This might be a prime argument consider the differences between the capitalist West, which sucks in many ways for many people in it, and non-capitalist countries that delivered even less for more people.) There are a wide range of policies that may be available to tackle housing shortages, high rents, etc. Many might be in some way distorting a free market as price controls do, but they might also be better policy. Rent controls might look simple and obvious to deliver a seeming positive, but that doesn't necessarily make them the best and deepest answer to a problem, and economists might have some useful things to tell us about why.
A landlord also has to pay insurance, or has substantial one-off costs to replace a roof, the plumbing, or a tenant causes thousands of pounds worth of damage and skips out on the utility bills, and all the landlord gets as recompense is to keep the £500 deposit. Undoubtedly there are plenty of cheating scumbags, just like any industry. At the other end, there are also landlords getting screwed by bad luck or bad tenants.I'd suggest that might be heavily weighted by business property rental. I know for a fact that the rent in my area is colossally larger than the mortgage repayments on equivalent (and even much better) properties, and I've had a string of landlords now that also make no investments in basic maintenance.
The core arguments on price controls look pretty sensible to me. What's the basis to challenge them? Or, what is being proposed to mitigate the risks / problems that the core arguments say will occur?They might. But the core arguments put forward by the formative economists on this topic, like Friedman, are unconvincing and have also gone quite unchallenged for decades.
Sure, that's why we constrain free markets in all sorts of exciting and interesting ways with taxes, redistribution, regulations, etc. How to arrange the distribution of wealth in society is a neverendingly interesting matter. It's plain that many economists are also concerned with QoL, fairness and equality, and yet they are not necessarily in favour of rent control. They might have better ideas about how to deal with housing problems.A poorly functioning economy is liable to provide poor QoL. It does not follow from this (demonstrably) that better productivity/GDP = better QoL for people across the board. A great many economists seem to prioritise the former (fine) and disregard the latter (not fine), sometimes fatuously assuming that the latter will automatically come alongside it.
Maybe they'll have significant one-off costs, though complete replacements for such things are exceedingly rare and once-a-decade even if they do crop up. But I've had multiple landlords now who've been legally obliged to make essential repairs and... just haven't. They've dragged it out, on and on, through changing property managers and unanswered emails and scheduled inspections, for years on end until the tenancy ends. Multiple times. One such instance is ongoing right now.A landlord also has to pay insurance, or has substantial one-off costs to replace a roof, the plumbing, or a tenant causes thousands of pounds worth of damage and skips out on the utility bills, and all the landlord gets as recompense is to keep the £500 deposit. Undoubtedly there are plenty of cheating scumbags, just like any industry. At the other end, there are also landlords getting screwed by bad luck or bad tenants.
In the UK, admittedly it probably tends more to the former because landlords have been heavily favoured and empowered by successive (mostly Tory) governments over the last 40 years. It doesn't mean that the immediate answer is necessarily rent control.
As I mentioned above, the core arguments for Friedman and Glaeser rested on low/poorly distributed construction as a side-effect. It short, not even a direct impact, but an indirect motivational shift, of the sort that could be addressed through proper planning/regulation or public works.The core arguments on price controls look pretty sensible to me. What's the basis to challenge them? Or, what is being proposed to mitigate the risks / problems that the core arguments say will occur?
Some of 'em. They don't seem to be setting the agenda much, even for bodies that get treated as unimpeachably authoritative, like the IFS-- and I say that as someone who's worked with them (briefly).Sure, that's why we constrain free markets in all sorts of exciting and interesting ways with taxes, redistribution, regulations, etc. How to arrange the distribution of wealth in society is a neverendingly interesting matter. It's plain that many economists are also concerned with QoL, fairness and equality, and yet they are not necessarily in favour of rent control. They might have better ideas about how to deal with housing problems.
I haven't rented since 2009, thankfully: benefits of living in a relatively modest part of the country. Even then I don't think I had any particularly bad landlords - one probably screwed me out of a chunk of the deposit but not too seriously - and a couple were positively lovely.Maybe I'm just cranky and feeling a bit guillotiney because of the aforementioned currently ongoing fuckery with the landlord. Tis possible. I've met good ones too-- though they haven't been mine.
You know what also hasn't worked? Not having rent controlThere is consensus among economists that rent control reduces the quality and quantity of rental housing units.
I am open to be proven wrong but rent control seems to not work.
I would add that it is likely better for the houses as well, having those immediately impacted by disrepair be responsible for maintenance.The ability to own one's home and build assets rather than constantly piss money into a landlord's pockets offers forms of economic stability and development for many.