• @Wanderer
    link
    -21
    edit-2
    2 months ago

    Rent control is stupid.

    “Rent control appears to be the most efficient technique presently known to destroy a city – except for bombing,” Swedish economist Assar Lindbeck

      • @Wanderer
        link
        -122 months ago

        So people should be able to live in someone’s house indefinitely?

          • @Wanderer
            link
            -62 months ago

            They system that allows for it is broken not the people doing it.

            This is what people fail to understand, you think banning people from owning multiple houses or rent control will magically fix the issue. It won’t, it will just make things a lot worse for the renter and for the first time buyer. Life isn’t that easy. You can’t just “solve” an issue you really don’t understand by making simple laws.

    • @otp@sh.itjust.works
      link
      fedilink
      52 months ago

      Forget the opinions of foreign economists… especially when they’re in countries who may have even more thorough tenant laws than we have. It’s not an apples-to-apples comparison.

      Even still, rent control is important. Renters need to have stability in their month-to-month payments, and there doesn’t need to be an easy way to force people out of their homes (e.g., jacking up rent 200%).

      • @Wanderer
        link
        -92 months ago

        Contracts should be long enough to offer stability. Fix the laws then.

        Toronto issue is the public transport is terrible. Needs more rail to high density hubs around the city. But the real issue is the ridiculous immigration levels 20 percent of Canada is Immigrants. Of course all that’s going to happen is it will keep houses increasing in prices and keep wages down.

        Good for businesses and land owners bad for the everyday Canadian.

        • @otp@sh.itjust.works
          link
          fedilink
          92 months ago

          To be long enough to offer stability, contract length should be up to the tenant, extendable by the tenant as many times and for as long as they should want.

          Stability should be for the tenant, not for the landlord.

          • @Wanderer
            link
            -62 months ago

            That’s completely ridiculous.

            Rules like that would negatively impact the renter because no one would lease.

            I’ve never met an online community as economically illiterate as lemmy. This is not how the real world works, you can’t just will things to work a certain way. Rules like that would be a disaster.

            • @otp@sh.itjust.works
              link
              fedilink
              32 months ago

              Actually, if no one is leasing, maybe that could be the ticket we need to give us the “housing bubble burst” people have been hoping for for decades. Everyone sells their extra homes simultaneously… sounds great! Lol

              • @Wanderer
                link
                -22 months ago

                Not going to happen. Its not a bubble if demand increases more than supply. Even if the bubble bursts don’t expect much.

                Go look at the bursting bubble in 2008 and look at how longnit took for prices to return then exceed 2008 prices.

                Demand needs to decrease or supply needs to increase, or both.

                Making it harder to lease will reduce the amount of housing available on the market and will futher reduce the supply.

                • @otp@sh.itjust.works
                  link
                  fedilink
                  22 months ago

                  If people aren’t going to lease, won’t they sell anything they’re not living in?

                  They’d either rent it out, sell, or sit on an empty home.

                  If they’d be content sitting on an empty home, then we just need to tax empty homes. (Which would be great for those landlords who have 20 “homes” in their townhouse for international students…)

                  • @Wanderer
                    link
                    22 months ago

                    No.

                    Anyone with a spare room won’t rent. Why would a 25 year old rent out a room in a 2 bed if they thinking of starting a family or upgrading in 5 years? Why would a old couple rent out a room if they want to leave it to their children.

                    Even family homes. Maybe it’s in a good area and in 5-10 years the land can be turned into more profitable high density but seeing as you can’t throw people out of they homes it will make more sense to leave it vacant or knock it down.

                    It would massively reduce the supply of housing.

                    Equally no one would bother building housing at all, it wouldn’t financially make sense. It’s not like they have to spend money in Toronto they would just spend it elsewhere.

            • Avid Amoeba
              link
              fedilink
              12 months ago

              This is your brain on neoliberal brainwashing. It’s not your fault.

              • @Wanderer
                link
                -12 months ago

                I’m not a neoliberal.

                Just because you stupid idea is stupid doesn’t mean I’m a neoliberal. It’s just a terrible idea.