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TheBenjamin8 t1_j6yajrd wrote

Hi yall, thanks for doing this! I'm a co-founder at House Numbers and follow Nicole on Twitter (really appreciate her unbiased & evidence-based reporting!). These Qs are all of you...
What's your take on rent control, specifically its effectiveness and impact as a long-term solution to housing affordability?
Also, I am (we are) passionate about homeownership among the US middle class. Recently, there's been a ton of press about how it's under threat (investment banks, iBuyers, general affordability issues). How do you perceive this threat? (is it real?, is it overblown?, etc). I've seen some reports that show homeownership is historically stable but I'm curious your thoughts!
Thank you in advance!
- Ben (co-founder, https://housenumbers.io)

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wsj OP t1_j6yi02q wrote

Rent control as a topic has a good bit of research literature focused on it. Based on real-life cases, restricting the amount of rent a landlord may collect tends to dis-incentivize capital improvements to a property, or even new construction, because the costs tend to increase with inflation, many times at a faster pace than rent growth. While rent control measures can stem the rapid rise in rents over a short time period (and thus offer relief to burdened tenants), over a longer time horizon, they tend to discourage development and lead to diminished supply in the market, which in turn, keeps market-rate rents going up. A more sustainable solution for affordable housing, especially given population growth, is new construction. - George

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