In one study by the American Economic Association, San Francisco’s 1994 rent control law resulted in a 5.1% city-wide increase in overall rents over the following two decades, with renters’ mobility curtailed by 20% and landlords reacting by reducing rental housing supplies by 15% by selling to owner-occupants and redeveloping buildings.
A European study of Germany’s 2015 rent control found that although the measure found significant success in the short term, dampening rental prices by up to 5% for all dwellings, the effect vanished around one year after the implementation, with basically no effect on rental prices thereafter. Furthermore, the biggest beneficiaries of the rent control were mostly areas inhabited by high-income households, missing the original goal of helping those most in need, and impacting the quality of homes available to rent as an additional consequence.
No silver bullet, but agents can support tenants
There’s not much more that can be said about rent controls at this time. The public push for them will undoubtedly grow given that not much is likely to change with regard either to the cost-of-living crisis or with the supply issues (something that would otherwise take years to address at scale).
What can be done is something that agents have always been doing – helping their customers to find homes wherever they can. Whilst supply is limited and affordability remains an issue, there are rooms and properties out there that will more closely match the renter’s price capability.
On the technological side, agents can help tenants by utilising their data to more accurately match tenants with properties in their price range, showing them opportunities that fit in with their affordability. But on the personal side, agents can continue to show their support with their expertise by advising tenants how they can manage their rent, what to do if they are struggling with arrears, and where to look for properties that they can afford.
It’s a challenging market, and none of these actions are a silver bullet for rent control, but we’re all in this together at the end, and tenants will welcome any sincere initiatives to support them when their chips are down.
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