Why Rent Control Hurts Renters - YouTube

Channel: PragerU

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There's no hot button issue hotter than rent control. Even the most courageous politican
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quakes at the idea of opposing it. For starters, no one likes landlords. Second, those who
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benefit from rent control - and there are a lot of them -- vote.
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And it has huge emotional appeal. Imagine this six o'clock news story: a reporter interviews
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a senior citizen describing how she'll have to vacate her small apartment, her home for
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twenty five years, if her rent control isn't maintained. What politician wants to go up
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against that? These are just a few of the reasons why, once
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a city adopts rent control, it's almost impossible to dislodge it.
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But does rent control work? Does it lower or housing costs? And does it increase the
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building of more affordable housing? It might surprise you to know that nearly
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all economists -- on the right and the left -- from the late Milton Friedman to Paul Krugman
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agree that the answer is no. In a survey of 464 economists in the May 1992 issue of American
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Economic Review, 93% said that "a ceiling on rents reduces the quantity and quality
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of housing available." Why the unanimity? Because it's an accepted
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economic principal that government imposed price controls -- and that's what rent control
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is -- always lead to price distortions --- in this case rents.
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This applies everywhere, but let's focus on New York City, the place where I have concentrated
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my research.
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New York has the biggest rental market in the country. Of the city's 8.2 million residents,
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5 and a half million rent. And these five and half million renters live in about 2.2
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million apartments or rented houses.
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Every year, a city board votes on how much owners of rent-regulated apartments will be
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able to charge their tenants for the following year's one-year or two-year leases.
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The board members base their decisions not on supply and demand but on an estimate of
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how much costs such as fuel and insurance have risen. And, of course, how much of an
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increase voters will tolerate.
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Think about what this means: the longer you stay in your apartment the more you benefit
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from below-market rents. Or to put it another way, why would you ever leave your rent controlled
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apartment? The late screenwriter Nora Ephron once noted
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with some satisfaction that she moved into a five-bedroom apartment on the Upper West
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Side in 1980 and stayed there for 24 years, paying one-third the true market rent.
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The well-off who benefit from great rents
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have the resources (in part from the money they've saved on rent!) to make their own
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improvements to their units - paint, redecorate and so on.
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But what about the majority of renters who have much less money? They're not so lucky
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because landlords can't afford to improve or even maintain their rent-controlled apartments.
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Since they can't raise rents to market levels, they can only make a profit by keeping their
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costs to an absolute minimum. And there's another reason landlords have
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little incentive to maintain rent controlled apartments. They have no fear that their renters
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will move out. And if they do, there's always a long line of people waiting to move in.
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And consider one more unintended consequence
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of rent control. Why would investors build new apartments for anyone but the very wealthy
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in a city where rents are controlled? The answer, of course, is that they rarely
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do. The vast majority of new residential construction in New York is geared to the wealthy who can
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pay rents above the controlled limit or who are willing to buy their apartments outright
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as condos or co-ops. These expensive units are well beyond the reach of the middle class,
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let alone those lower on the economic strata. In sum, rent control
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1: Hurts the people it's supposed to help. 2: Gives landlords little incentive to improve
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their housing stock. 3: Discourages construction of new housing
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for all but the rich. And the voters love it!
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So, rather than dream of the day when New York or Los Angeles and other rent controlled
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cities might abandon this self-destructive urban policy, maybe we should see this as
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a cautionary tale that well illustrates a valuable maxim: be wary of government programs
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bearing gifts. Like the famous horse that destroyed an ancient city, they come with
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all sorts of problems. I'm Nicole Gelinas, a senior fellow at the
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Manhattan Institute for Prager University.