• @[email protected]
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    2311 months ago

    Rent control doesn’t fix the problem of inequitable ownership of housing or the bad incentives that prevent the building of more housing or the lack of support for public housing. Rent control is a bad bandaid

    • @[email protected]
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      1311 months ago

      It helps remove the incentive to buy up all of the single family homes. The calculus is pretty simple -

      1. buy a house
      2. rent it
      3. pay the mortgage, insurance, and maintenance with the overinflated rental costs because everyone colluded to jack up rental prices across the board
      4. eventually own the house entirely off of the back of renters
      5. repeat

      Renting a home shouldn’t cost enough for that cycle to be self sustaining.

      • @[email protected]
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        211 months ago

        I work in municipal development.

        100% of the single-family home projects that have been proposed in my area for the last year have been rental-only communities.

        Like - they don’t even want to give the houses individual water meters. They want to hook them all together, which means they can’t even be converted down the line to something else without digging up all the damn infrastructure.

        • @[email protected]
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          19 months ago

          I’ve visited some friends in those rental only neighborhoods. The lawns are all trashed. The neighborhood was less than three years old but it was already sliding toward a slum because of the clear lack of ownership by the occupants.

          Honestly I can’t believe that part of the rent didn’t go toward neighborhood wide lawn care.

      • @[email protected]
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        211 months ago

        I don’t think it actually fixes that. Rent control numbers are in the hands of politicians who may just act as toadies for landlords. Maybe they’ll control rent on the higher side some but ultimately they have an incentive to keep that cash flowing.

        • @[email protected]
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          711 months ago

          Having money gets you no PMI and better interest rates. It’s cheaper for someone well funded to buy a house than someone who isn’t. I’m not saying that it’s a slam dunk rent is covered, but it can be a lot closer than you’d expect.

          It’s not without risk though. The renters could damage the house. There will be broken appliances and roof replacements. You still have property taxes and maybe HOA fees.

          Even if it’s half a house for free, that’s a pretty strong addition to your wealth management.