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LunchMasterFlex t1_izh86qu wrote

Yeah. It didn’t work then because you can’t withhold things people don’t want. People left faster than they could replace and they already held some stock vacant. Look at commercial rentals in manhattan. Land lords would rather hold a storefront empty and wait for another Starbucks than lower the price and give it to a small business owner.

And what’s the metric for vacancy? Actual empty units or units left in the market? Who reports the vacancies?

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CactusBoyScout OP t1_izhbop1 wrote

The state tracks housing vacancy rates. I don’t know the exact criteria but they’ve tracked it for decades.

The rent stabilization law has a stipulation that stabilization ends automatically when vacancies reach a certain percentage that’s considered healthy for a housing market. That has never happened, obviously. They came close during 2020 but still short.

And we saw what happens to rents when vacancies actually increase significantly.

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