Showing posts with label Rents. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rents. Show all posts

Wednesday, 13 March 2024

Defending the Slumlord



 

Since landlords are getting it in the neck, again, we figured it's time to post the classic defence of the very worst of them: of the so-called "slumlord" who gouges rent, poisons tenants , and offers decent habitat only to rats and cockroaches.  Can anyone defend that? Walter Block does in this guest post ...

Defending the Slumlord

by Walter Block

"Let's see, I have a nice three-room apartment on the upper West Side … No, no Madam, not a speck of lead paint on the woodwork … it's been all chewed off."

To many people, the slumlord — alias ghetto landlord and rent gouger — is proof that man can, while still alive, attain a satanic image. Recipient of vile curses, pincushion for needle-bearing tenants with a penchant for voodoo, perceived as exploiter of the downtrodden, the slumlord is surely one of the most hated figures of the day.

The indictment is manifold: he charges unconscionably high rents; he allows his buildings to fall into disrepair; his apartments are painted with cheap lead paint, which poisons babies; and he allows junkies, rapists, and drunks to harass the tenants. The falling plaster, the overflowing garbage, the omnipresent cockroaches, the leaky plumbing, the roof cave-ins and the fires, are all integral parts of the slumlord's domain. And the only creatures who thrive in his premises are the rats.

The indictment, highly charged though it is, is spurious. The owner of "ghetto" housing differs little from any other purveyor of low-cost merchandise. In fact, he is no different from any purveyor of any kind of merchandise. They all charge as much as they can.

We all charge as much as we can


First consider the purveyors of cheap, inferior, and secondhand merchandise as a class. One thing above all else stands out about merchandise they buy and sell: it is cheaply built, inferior in quality, or secondhand. A rational person would not expect high quality, exquisite workmanship, or superior new merchandise at bargain rate prices; he would not feel outraged and cheated if bargain rate merchandise proved to have only bargain rate qualities. Our expectations from margarine are not those of butter. We are satisfied with lesser qualities from a used car than from a new car. However, when it comes to housing, especially in the urban setting, people expect, even insist upon, quality housing at bargain prices.

But what of the claim that the slumlord overcharges for his decrepit housing? This is erroneous. Everyone tries to obtain the highest price possible for what he produces, and to pay the lowest price possible for what he buys. Landlords operate this way, as do workers, minority group members, socialists, babysitters, and communal farmers. Even widows and pensioners who save their money for an emergency try to get the highest interest rates possible for their savings.

According to the reasoning that finds slumlords contemptible, all these people must also be condemned. For they "exploit" the people to whom they sell or rent their services and capital in the same way when they try to obtain the highest return possible.

But, of course, they are not contemptible — at least not because of their desire to obtain as high a return as possible from their products and services. And neither are slumlords. Landlords of dilapidated houses are singled out for something that is almost a basic part of human nature — the desire to barter and trade and to get the best possible bargain.

The critics of the slumlord fail to distinguish between the desire to charge high prices, which everyone has, and the ability to do so, which not everyone has. Slumlords are distinct, not because they want to charge high prices, but because they can. The question that is therefore central to the issue — and that critics totally disregard — is why this is so.

What usually stops people from charging inordinately high prices is the competition that arises as soon as the price and profit margin of any given product or service begins to rise. If the price of Frisbees, for example, starts to rise, established manufacturers will expand production, new entrepreneurs will enter the industry, used Frisbees will perhaps be sold in secondhand markets, etc. All these activities tend to counter the original rise in price.

If the price of rental apartments suddenly began to rise because of a sudden housing shortage, similar forces would come into play. New housing would be built by established real-estate owners and by new ones who would be drawn into the industry by the price rise. Old housing would tend to be renovated; basements, attics and sleepouts would be pressed into use. All these activities would tend to drive the price of housing down, and cure the housing shortage.

If landlords tried to raise the rents in the absence of a housing shortage, they would find it difficult to keep their apartments rented. For both old and new tenants would be tempted away by the relatively lower rents charged elsewhere.

No.  The problem is not the slumlord — the problem is a lack of competition, which means an inability to build new apartments.

Even if landlords banded together to raise rents, they would not be able to maintain the rise in the absence of a housing shortage. Such an attempt would be countered by new entrepreneurs, not party to the cartel agreement, who would rush in to meet the demand for lower priced housing. They would buy existing housing and build new housing.

Tenants would, of course, flock to the noncartel housing. Those who remained in the high-price buildings would tend to use less space, either by doubling up or by seeking less space than before. As this occurs it would become more difficult for the cartel landlords to keep their buildings fully rented.

Inevitably, the cartel would break up, as the landlords sought to find and keep tenants in the only way possible: by lowering rents. It is, therefore, specious to claim that landlords charge whatever they please. They charge whatever the market will bear, as does everyone else.

An additional reason for calling the claim unwarranted is that there is, at bottom, no really legitimate sense to the concept of overcharging. "Overcharging" can only mean "charging more than the buyer would like to pay." But since we would all really like to pay nothing for our dwelling space (or perhaps minus infinity, which would be equivalent to the landlord paying the tenant an infinite amount of money for living in his building), landlords who charge anything at all can be said to be overcharging. Everyone who sells at any price greater than zero can be said to be overcharging, because we would all like to pay nothing (or minus infinity) for what we buy.

What about a law banning slums?


Disregarding as spurious the claim that the slumlord overcharges, what of the vision of rats, garbage, falling plaster, etc.? Is the slumlord responsible for these conditions?

Although it is fashionable in the extreme to say "yes," this will not do. For the problem of slum housing is not really a problem of slums or of housing at all. It is a problem of poverty — a problem for which the landlord cannot be held responsible. And when it is not the result of poverty, it is not a social problem at all.

Slum housing with all its horrors is not a problem when the inhabitants are people who can afford higher quality housing, but prefer to live in slum housing because of the money they can save thereby.

Such a choice might not be a popular one, but other people's freely made choices that affect only them cannot be classified as a social problem. If that could be done, we would all be in danger of having our most deliberate choices, our most cherished tastes and desires characterised as "social problems" by people whose taste differs from ours.

Slum housing is a problem when the inhabitants live there of necessity — not wishing to remain there, but unable to afford anything better. Their situation is certainly distressing, but the fault does not lie with the landlord. On the contrary, he is providing a necessary service, given the poverty of the tenants.

For proof, consider a law prohibiting the existence of slums, and therefore of slumlords, without making provisions for the slum dwellers in any other way, such as providing decent housing for the poor or an adequate income to buy or rent good housing. The argument is that if the slumlord truly harms the slum dweller, then his elimination, with everything else unchanged, ought to increase the net well-being of the slum tenant.

But the law would not accomplish this. It would greatly harm not only the slumlords but the slum dwellers as well. If anything, it would harm the slum dwellers even more, for the slumlords would lose only one of perhaps many sources of income; the slum dwellers would lose their very homes.

They would be forced to rent more expensive dwelling space, with consequent decreases in the amount of money available for food, medicines, and other necessities. No. The problem is not the slumlord — the problem is poverty. Only if the slumlord were the cause of poverty could he be legitimately blamed for the evils of slum housing.

Why damn the slumlord?


Why is it then, if he is no more guilty of underhandedness than other merchants, that the slumlord has been singled out for vilification? After all, those who sell used clothes to Bowery bums are not reviled, even though their wares are inferior, the prices high, and the purchasers poor and helpless. Instead of blaming the merchants, however, we seem to know where the blame lies — in the poverty and hopeless condition of the Bowery bum.

In like manner, people do not blame the owners of junkyards for the poor condition of their wares or the dire straits of their customers. People do not blame the owners of "day-old bakeries" for the staleness of the bread. They realise, instead, that were it not for junkyards and these bakeries, poor people would be in an even worse condition than they are now in.

Although the answer can only be speculative, it would seem that there is a positive relationship between the amount of governmental interference in an economic arena, and the abuse and invective heaped upon the businessmen serving that arena. There have been few laws interfering with the "day-old bakeries" or junkyards, but many in the housing area. The link between government involvement in the housing market and the plight of the slumlord's public image should, therefore, be pinpointed.

That there is strong and varied government involvement in the housing market cannot be denied. Scatter-site housing projects, "public" housing and urban renewal projects, rental standards and zoning ordinances and building codes, are just a few examples. Each of these has created more problems than it has solved. More housing has been destroyed than created, rental housing has been withdrawn from (or not entered0 the market, racial tensions have been exacerbated, and neighbourhoods and community life have been shattered.

In each case, it seems that the spillover effects of bureaucratic red tape and bungling are visited upon the slumlord. He bears the blame for much of the overcrowding engendered by the urban renewal program. He is blamed for not keeping his buildings up to the standards set forth in unrealistic building codes that, if met, would radically worsen the situation of the slum dweller. 

Compelling "Cadillac housing" can only harm the inhabitants of "Volkswagen housing." It puts all housing out of the financial reach of the poor.

The bad incentives of rent control


Perhaps the most critical link between the government and the disrepute in which the slumlord is held is rent-control law. For rent-control legislation changes the usual profit incentives, which put the entrepreneur in the service of his customers, to incentives that make him the direct enemy of his tenant-customers.

Ordinarily the landlord (or any other businessman) earns money by serving the needs of his tenants. If he fails to meet these needs, then with enough supply in the market the tenants will tend to move out. Vacant apartments mean, of course, a loss of income. Advertising, rental agents, repairs, painting, and other conditions involved in re-renting an apartment mean extra expenditures.

In addition, the landlord who fails to meet the needs of the tenants may have to charge lower rents than he otherwise could. As in other businesses, the customer is "always right," and the merchant ignores this dictum only at his own peril.

But with rent control, the incentive system is turned around. Here the landlord can earn the greatest return not by serving his tenants well, but by mistreating them, by malingering, by refusing to make repairs, by insulting them. When the rents are legally controlled at rates below their market value, the landlord earns the greatest return not by serving his tenants, but by getting rid of them. For then he can replace them with higher-paying non-rent-controlled tenants.

If the incentive system is turned around under rent control, it is the self-selection process through which entry to the landlord "industry" is determined. The types of people attracted to an occupation are influenced by the type of work that must be done in the industry.

If the occupation calls (financially) for service to consumers, one type of landlord will be attracted. If the occupation calls (financially) for harassment of consumers, then quite a different type of landlord will be attracted. In other words, in many cases the reputation of the slumlord as cunning, avaricious, etc., might be well-deserved, but it is the rent control program in the first place that encourages people of this type to become landlords.

If the slumlord were prohibited from lording over slums, and if this prohibition were actively enforced, the welfare of the poor slum dweller would be immeasurably worsened, as we have seen. It is the prohibition of high rents by rent control and similar legislation that causes the deterioration of housing. It is the prohibition of low-quality housing by housing codes and the like that causes landlords to leave the field of housing.

The result is that tenants have fewer choices, and the choices they have are of low quality. If landlords cannot make as much profit in supplying housing to the poor as they can in other endeavors, they will leave the field. Attempts to lower rents and maintain high quality through prohibitions only lower profits and drive slumlords out of the field, leaving poor tenants immeasurably worse off.

The slumlord does make a positive contribution to society; without him, the economy would be worse off. That he continues in his thankless task, amidst all the abuse and vilification, can only be evidence of his basically heroic nature.

* * * * * 

Walter Block is an American Austrian School economist and anarcho-capitalist theorist. 
He was the Harold E. Wirth Eminent Scholar Endowed Chair in Economics at the School of Business at Loyola University New Orleans and a senior fellow of the non-profit think-tank Ludwig von Mises Institute in Auburn, Alabama.
This post is an excerpt from his 1976 book 'Defending the Undefendable [free download here]. It previously appeared at the Mises Wire.

Tuesday, 16 January 2024

Two glimpses of life for renters

 

Two glimpses here of life for renters -- one from Argentina, the other from Paris.

FIRST, in Argentina, where a 'renter's rights' law of 2020 had mandated minimum terms, improved rental standards, and rent control (with prices set by government). At the end of last year, rents were rising by around 40% and few new rentals were coming on the market.

And now? New Argentine president Javier Milei eliminated the rental restrictions and repealed the law, "and in less than a month, rents have gone down 20-30% and supply has doubled." 

Turns out that laws designed to help renters did for them just the opposite -- keeping landlords out of the market, and restricting renter choice.

MEANWHILE, in Paris, overloaded with pro-renter legislation -- making the rental market "a byzantine black box of inefficiency" -- a homeless economist wishes they'd stop trying to help. He'd like to be a renter but can't. Here's his story:

Before I turn to regulations and generalisations, let me [tell you abot myself]. I grew up outside of Paris, France. When I returned to the US at the age of 14, I promised myself I would someday return to live in the City of Lights. I have been able to return a few times a year to visit family or attend academic conferences, and I have spent some delightful summers here. But it was always temporary, and I never got to be a true Parisian and suck the cultural and culinary marrow from the city. Then, finally, it happened. For all its disruptions, COVID did leave us with at least one positive change: new attitudes to remote working and distance education. So I left a cushy endowed chair at a mediocre state university, and I found a professorship at the Universidad de las Hespérides.

The university is nominally located in the Canary Islands; it is a 100-percent-remote, start-up, classical liberal endeavor. The university was started by Gabriel Calzada, former chancellor of the classical liberal Universidad Francisco Marroquin, which has been thriving since 1971 in Guatemala City. The university aims to teach solid science that is rooted in the philosophy of freedom, through an exciting combination of synchronous and asynchronous remote classes. It’s not the comfort of an endowed chair with a reduced teaching load and a big travel budget. But I get to live in Paris, and I get to teach again, after a decade without students — I say that intentionally: in the past decade, I have had plenty of “COs” (classroom occupants) and “RGs” (revenue generators), but a student must have an actual desire to learn).

When I arrived in Paris this summer, I found the rental market to be a byzantine black box of inefficiency. I started looking in August. At the twilight of the year, I have finally — with the help of a facilitator — visited a whopping four apartments out of more than 50 inquiries, and I have been rejected by all four, because I don’t quite check the right boxes.

Why is it so difficult to secure a lease in Paris? I am a victim of strong consumer-protection laws. Any decent student in a micro-principles class can tell you that interventions have unintended consequences.

Here are some of the “protections” from which I am suffering: 
  • It is illegal to evict a tenant, even for non-payment, during the “winter truce” from November 1 to March 31. After all, it can get cold out there. 
  • An eviction procedure typically takes four to six months (aside from the five winter months, of course). After multiple steps, a landlord must seek a judge’s approval to cancel a lease and evict a tenant. The judge has one month to decide; if the judge does not grant the lease cancellation, the tenant can then get a grace period of up to three years. If the judge rules in favor of the landlord, the tenant has two months to vacate the premises (outside, again, of the five winter months). 
  • The city of Paris has enacted rent controls – these vary by neighbourhood, so there is some lip service to markets… but markets are not allowed to function. 
  • From 1997 to 2010, and again since 2023, new construction has been limited to 12 stories (37 meters or about 120 feet). From 2010 to 2013, the limit was temporarily raised to 50 meters (164 feet) for housing blocks (or about 16 stories). The urban landscape is surely more pleasant, but the opportunity cost is obvious. 
  • It will be illegal, effective in 2025, to rent any property that has the lowest environmental impact score (more than 420kwH per square meter of annual energy consumption or more than 100 kg of CO2 emissions per square meter per year). ... This means, of course: (1) a further drop in the housing stock; or (2) mandatory expenses for landlords, with an incentive to occupy one’s own property to avoid costly renovations.
There are, naturally, other causes, such as the recent rise in European interest rates (which put pressure on housing purchases, and thus on rentals), and the upcoming Paris Olympics (which offer a further incentive to buy now, so as to sublease apartments over the summer or rent them on AirBNB).

But the most interesting one is the French obsession with one’s “socioeconomic status.” Yes, France, the country of liberté, égalité, fraternité and the abolition of privileges after the Ancien Régime, slots everybody into an official socioeconomic status.
Unlike the US, where the IRS kindly taxes all forms of income (if at different rates), every French citizen has an official status: student, temporary contract, permanent contract, retired, freelance, and the like. Even though I am a dual national with France, I lack a formal status until I file to become recognised, formally, as an entrepreneur. (I wonder what Jean-Baptiste Say, who coined the word and was one of the first theorists of entrepreneurship, would say.) 
Of course, I can’t get that formal status until I have an address. So, in the meantime, my US credit score, my income, my savings, and my twelve different leases over 32 years, with a stellar history of rent payment, along with the purchase and sale of three different properties in the US — all mean nothing to a landlord or a real estate agent who can’t figure out in which box I belong. It would be much easier for me to be an impossible-to-fire French state employee with half my income.

As an economist, I tried a number of market measures, from offering a higher rent to offering a substantially bigger security deposit. This was all in vain, and I am still looking.

I’m frustrated but I’ll be fine: I have generous relatives, and I can afford hotels and AirBNBs when I need to. And, as a veteran of American public universities, I can navigate make-work bureaucracies. I pity those who lack the means or the experience, as regulations typically have regressive effects. We need only look at the sad case of San Francisco. I just wish the French government would stop helping us!


Wednesday, 25 January 2023

Warm, dry ... and increasingly out of reach

 

A lesson from Scotland for locals here who like to bash landlords in the name of improving things for renters. 

It turns out that private rents in Glasgow are rocketing as landlords, sick of being bashed by the Scottish government's many laws making it harder to be a landlord ( in the name, it's said, of improving things for renters), are simply exiting the market. CityLets, a Glasgow residential letting agency, explained that "legislation was leading to many small landlords selling up." 

The results are, predictably, disastrous for renters. Colin Macmillan, from Glasgow Property Letting, said: 

Whilst the reality of the Scottish Government’s sanctions and actions are filtering through the private rented sector, many traditional landlords have had enough and are exiting the market.
    With an oversubscription of university places, we find ourselves in a perfect storm.
    Fewer properties available with unprecedented demand equals hyper-inflated rents.
    We also find ourselves in a cost of living crisis at probably the worst time of the year, with energy costs rising as the temperature is falling, and subsequent worries that rent arrears may increase also.”
    Those involved in the rented sector said private landlords have become a 'political football'.

One of the measures that would make the the disaster even worse was a rent freeze to come in from April. In what's called "a major u-turn," the Scottish government now propose to replace it with a "cap" on rent increases. Housing minister Patrick Harvey "said the government now accepted a rent freeze would hit landlords too hard." You think?

As Natalie Solent comments

Well, “disastrous” to “bad” is an improvement. But unless and until the Scottish government realises that both rent freezes and rent caps are very nice for tenants already in place but very bad for anyone trying to rent a house or flat from the day they are announced onwards, times will be hard for those seeking to rent in Scotland.

And the same for anywhere else they're threatened.


Friday, 22 January 2021

"Tenants have always had rights"


Landlords and tenants alike have been gearing up to address the government's law changes affecting them both this year. As it happens, similar things have been happening in Texas, where the Texas Institute for Property Rights makes the point that while housing advocates frequently call for laws to "protect" the rights of tenants, the fact is, tenants have always had rights -- just like landlords, they have rights by virtue of being human. 
    [A]ll individuals are endowed with certain rights, namely, the rights to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. These rights apply to all individuals, including tenants and landlords. These rights pertain to freedom of action—the freedom to choose and pursue the values that will lead to a happy life...
    The advocates of 'tenants’ rights' imply that tenants have rights that are separate and distinct from landlords and other individuals. This means that tenants allegedly have the freedom to take actions that others may not take, such as staying in a property without paying rent. But if individuals have a right to a value, such as housing, then what of the rights of those who must provide that value? They are no longer free to pursue the values of their choosing.
This is the important difference between a right and a privilege: A right demands nothing of anyone else other than that they leave you alone unless you invite them; this protects everybody's rights equally. Whereas a privilege demands that others provide you by law with some good or service -- thus violating their rights. 

It's also important to stress that rights do not apply to groups:
Rights only apply to individuals, and they apply to all individuals equally, tenants and landlords alike.
    If your home is burglarised, it is not an issue of 'home owners’ rights.' If you are defrauded by an unscrupulous financial adviser, it isn’t an issue of 'investors’ rights.' If a landlord violates the terms of his lease agreement with a tenant, it is not an issue of 'tenants’ rights.' In each of these instances, it is an issue of individual rights—an individual has been deprived of his property without his consent.
    When 'rights' are applied to groups, the result is pressure group politics. Each group’s 'rights' can only be protected at the expense of individuals in other groups. The individual not in the currently popular group is caught in the crossfire. His freedom to act is secure only so long as his group is in favour.
    Those who are truly interested in helping tenants should be advocates for individual rights. When the rights of all individuals are protected—as individuals—then all be free to pursue the values that they want and need. And that includes both landlords and tenants.
It's just as true in Texas as it is here.
.

Tuesday, 19 November 2019

"Tenancy regulation will not build more houses. If you really care about protecting tenants, you need to have massive increases in housing supply. You need to have landlords competing for tenants. You need to have the run-down, damp, grotty dungers left vacant because people have other places that they can afford to live instead." Bonus #QotD


"Tenancy regulation will not build more houses. It can only address some of the current symptoms of a fundamentally broken housing market. 
    "Worse, it is the kind of move that makes the most sense if the Government is pessimistic about its chances of fixing the real underlying problem – making it easier to get new housing built...  
  "If you really care about protecting tenants, you need to have massive increases in housing supply. You need to have landlords competing for tenants. You need to have the run-down, damp, grotty dungers left vacant because people have other places that they can afford to live instead. When you're in a massive housing shortage and the alternative to a crappy house is a garage or a car, crappy houses get rented out. If we instead had a surplus of housing, those places would be left vacant and their owners would have to decide whether to refurbish or tear down... 
          ~ Eric Crampton, from his post 'Really protecting tenants'
.

Tuesday, 31 May 2016

Accommodation Supplement = Landlord Subsidy

 

The govt’s Accommodation Supplement has been getting air time today because of long-term mistakes in how it’s been paid, and because it received an $80 million increase in the budget.

Did you know how much this Accommodation Supplement costs taxpayers every year? $2.2billion is the answer, paid out every year to 286,000 people who qualify for it. (That’s around $8000 each per year, in case you were wondering, the total amount being far more than even most ministries are able to spend every year, paid to more than half of the 450,000 or so rental households.)

Do you know where all that dosh ultimately ends up? Of course you know: it washes straight through tenants into the bank accounts of their landlords – subsidising higher rents, leaving landlords better off and beneficiaries as far behind the 8 ball as before.

The euphemistically titled Ministry for Social Development, who hands out this largesse, itself calculates thatlandlord capture varies from 30 per cent to 78 per cent of the increase in subsidy.”

Do you think $2.2 billion of taxpayers’ money washing around is enough to shift the market? To actually increase the rents that people pay? To help make investment properties more attractive to buyers, and more expensive to rent? to capitalise higher rents into higher prices paid for rental properties? You bet your sweet life they do. The answer is: all of the above.

Which makes the Accommodation Supplement little more than a Landlord Subsidy.

Sure, the higher rents may mean landlords are able to make the general standard of rental accommodation somewhat better than it would be otherwise. But the general rental everybody pays – and the general value of rental property based on yield – are much, much higher than they would be otherwise.

How much higher? Let’s make it simple by using the classical calculation for prices, being Price = Money Demand / Total Supply, giving us $2.2 billion / 450,000 = $4,900 more every year taken from taxpayers’ pockets and deposited into landlord’s. Capitalise that general rental increase at today’s rule-of-thumb yield of five percent, and that’s nearly a $100,000 rise in price for the general rental property as a direct result of this Landlord Subsidy.

Nice.

(You may like to ponder at this point the idiocy of those arguing for a capital-gains tax, who effectivelysupport giving tenants an accommodation supplement with one hand, while taking the cash back with a tax on their landlord.)

So as long as the supply of rental housing remains constrained (and under National’s talk-loudly-and-do-nothing housing policy), then the Landlord Subsidy will represent nothing more than a five-to-six-figure gift to rental investors, bought at the expense of taxpayers, private renters, and everyone priced out of the market by this extra $2.2 billion bidding property away from them.

As Frederic Bastiat used to say, the policy represents one profit, and at least two losses.

You’d call it another example of the Law of Unintended Consequences, except that only a moron (or a welfare weeny) would think the consequence was unexpected.

There is no part of the economy more stuffed up and regulated by government than housing – at the intersection of four the most regulated parts of our economy*. So this is just one more distortion in what is already one of the most stuffed-up-by-government parts of the local economic system.

No wonder the housing market is broken – with no general recipe to fix it.


* Land supply, money supply, construction, local government.

RELATED POSTS:

  • “Readers might also like to read Malthus's 'High Price of Provisions' with the Accommodation Supplement in mind -- he explains perfectly why and how the Accommodation Supplement raises rents, and how it represents an almost direct subsidy to landlords.
        “Once again: one profit, two losses ....”
    Malthus explains the problem with #TeamKey’s first-home buyer subsidy – NOT PC
  • “The Greens' Metiria Turei calls the supplement a "landlord subsidy" and points to it as part of the general problem of housing affordability: it pushes up the price of housing.
        “In the current state of the world, she's mostly right. Given a near-vertical supply curve for housing, because land use policy in New Zealand is a complete mess, anything that subsidizes demand mostly gets capitalized into land prices. So it is a subsidy to landlords, mostly via capital gains.”
    Accommodation incidence – Eric Crampton, OFFSETTING BEHAVIOUR
  • .

Thursday, 14 April 2016

“Why younger people can’t afford a house”

Dominic Frisby tells Guardian readers why younger people can’t afford a house. Three reasons:

  • money became too cheap
  • planning rules became too numerous, and
  • it’s in the interests of the political elite to keep them that way.

This is not just true for the UK, but every place following their flawed prescription of town planning plus fractional-reserve banking. Which is to say, every developed country on the planet.

House prices [in the UK] have risen by 10% in the last year …What that means is that the intergenerational wealth divide just rose by another 10% – and anyone born after 1985 is going to find it 10% harder to ever buy a home.
    There is perhaps no greater manifestation of the wealth gap in this country than who owns a house and who doesn’t, and yet it’s so unnecessary.

Measure so-called “inequality” by reference to home ownership, and you’ll blow away every other single measure.

Ignoring land prices for the moment, houses do not cost a lot of money to build – a quick search online shows you can buy the materials for a three-bed timber-framed house for less than £30,000; in China a 3D printer can build a basic home for less than £3,000 – and the building cost of the houses we already have has long since been paid.

The building cost of houses has already been paid, but in many places (NZ being one) building regulation has also pushed up home building costs at an even faster rate than house prices have accelerated. Still..

How can it be that, in the liberal, peaceful, educated society that is 21st-century Britain, a generation is priced out? These are not times of war, nor are they, for the most part, periods of national emergency, so why should one couple be able to settle down and start a family and another not, by virtue of the fact that one was born 15 years earlier than the other?
    There has been a failure in both the media and government to properly diagnose the cause of high house prices. Until the causes – our systems of money and planning – are properly understood, we cannot hope to fix the problem.

Understanding the effect of these two, and how their negative effects exacerbate each other, this is the key.

The standard solution is: “we need to build more”, but this is not a simple supply-and-demand issue. Between 1997 and 2007 the housing stock grew by 10%, but the population only grew by 5%. If house prices were a function of supply and demand, they should have fallen slightly over this period. They didn’t. They rose by more than 300%.

Once you realise however that demand is actually a function of desire coupled with the abillity to pay, then you understand it actually is a function of suppy and demand. Because the cause of house price rises is the unrestrained supply of new money. That is to say (in our modern fiat-money world) of debt.

[So while housing stock increased by 10% and house prices rose by more than 300%], mortgage lending over the same period went up by 370%, thinktank Positive Money’s research shows. It was newly created debt that pushed up prices in a decade of extraordinarily loose lending, which gave birth to a national obsession. Houses were no longer places to live, but financial assets. Property owners became immensely wealthy without actually doing anything. And this great, unearned wealth saw the rise of a new rentier class: the buy-to-let landlord.
    When you have runaway price inflation such as this, the Bank of England has a responsibility to quash it, usually by putting up interest rates. But – and here is the great sleight of hand – the Bank has seen fit not to include house prices in its measures of price inflation. So, throughout the 90s and 00s, they could then “prove” price inflation was low or moderate and interest rates meandered lower. Meanwhile, more and more mortgages were issued, and so more and more money was created, and it pushed up prices. The government didn’t mind.
    Homeowners vote and homeowners were happy – they were getting rich.

Just one reason the political elites of every party offer no serious solution to the problem. And still the fraud continues…

The Bank of England says inflation is 0.3%. Really?
   With house prices up by 10% last year?
    When you make money this cheap, you create bubbles. Combining a money system that requires ever-expanding debt to function with a national policy of ignoring where that money goes is asking for trouble. And trouble is what we have.
   
2008 gave us the crisis we needed to address the problems inherent in our money system – how is money created? Who gains and who suffers by this system? – but our leaders chose not to. Instead interest rates were slashed, so mortgages and other debts became incredibly cheap to service (great if you already had a mortgage). We got the great obfuscation that is quantitative easing; £375bn of newly printed money flowed into the financial sector and on into the London property in which it mostly lives. Asset-owners were bailed out and the next generation was made to pay the price.
    Then we got help-to-buy, which is just another way to get new money into the market. And where lending has tightened in the UK, it hasn’t abroad, and so we have vast sums of money created overseas now entering our housing market and further driving up prices. Today in London everywhere you look there is a crane. There is no shortage of newbuild, yet we still have a crisis, because prices are so high.
    People associate debt with the poor. But large, cheap debt is, in fact, a luxury of large corporations, of the rich and of governments. It has created this unholy alliance between the three and with it an international culture of keeping debt costs low and asset prices high, whatever the consequences.

Risk-free profits, that’s what this culture has come to expect, backed up with bailouts should the shit hit the fan yet again.

Planning laws are the second part of the problem. All this money is pouring into a market that is restricted in how it can expand.
    Just 1.1% of rural and urban land in England and Wales has domestic property on it, according to
the 2011 National Ecosystem Assessment. 1.1%! Another 1% has commercial property and 2% is roads. The rest is not built on. You could almost double the housing stock of England and Wales, using little more than 1% of available land. But planning laws prevent that.

The same sort of figures apply here in New Zealand, except even less so. According to the Landcover Database of Terralink, urban areas and urban open space in New Zealand account for less than 1 percent of total area, one quarter of that in the Auckland region. If all of NZ's 1,471,476 existing households were to be rebuilt on an acre of land (which was the sort of thing proposed by Frank Lloyd Wright in his Broadacre project), we'd all fit in an area less than one-quarter the size of the Waikato -- and think how easy it'd be to thumb a lift out to Raglan!

The sad fact is this makes housing unaffordable for everyone not already owning a house; it means they suck capital from those who don’t. The even sadder part, for small builders, is that it tends to make house building the preserve of a few large companies; and for those seeking housing that’s in any way attractive, it leads (partly because of this near-monopoly) to the bland and characterless buildings that so blight every new suburb and every coastal development.

Our most beautiful domestic architecture was predominantly built in the 18th and 19th century, before planning laws [just as NZ’s most desired suburbs are those ‘planned’ before planning laws were themselves invented]. The more planning there is, the uglier our buildings [and suburbs] seem to get. [Have you ever visited Albany? Or Manuka City?]
   It’s inevitable when the final say on creative decisions is in the hands of regulators. Imagine Van Gogh needing regulatory approval on a painting. Let us simplify planning, let self-build flourish and let the creative – not the corporations – do the building. I’ve always dreamed of building my own home. I’m sure you have too. It needn’t cost a lot of money – except that it does. An acre of rural land worth £10,000 becomes an acre of land worth as much as £1m
once it has planning permission. [Just as an acre of land just outside Auckland’s Metropolitian Urban Limit is priced at around ten times more than a similar acre just inside.]  That is an expensive and needless cost of government.
    [Britain’s] 1947 planning act was founded on the … aim “that all the land of the country is used in the best interests of the whole people”. The opposite has happened. [Which is generally the case with all such aims.] The act reinforced the monopoly of the landowner and we now have a situation where more than 70% of UK land is owned by just 6,000 or so landowners (the Crown, large institutions and a few rich families). The act has led to huge concentrations of capital and people in areas that are already built up – especially London – bringing vast unearned wealth to those who own at the expense of those who don’t. It has actually caused the wealth gap to grow.

This is the most important, perhaps the only important wealth gap about which to worry: the gap propped up by governments making savers and those who don’t own homes prop up the wealth of those who do. However …

    The solution to the housing crisis is lower prices. What politician will stand for that? They daren’t let this market fail because too many people’s wealth is dependent on the value of their home – and homeowners vote more than renters. It’s not just the vested interest issue, with so many MPs being buy-to-let landlords (including 39% of Conservatives) [and almost every MP in the NZ parliament].
    The collapse of property prices between 1989 and 1994 made the Tories unelectable for half a generation. No party wants such a fate. Indeed if interest rates reflected 10% house price inflation, homes would become affordable pretty quickly, but then the whole financial house of cards would come crashing down too. Those responsible for that would become even more unelectable than the Tories were.
    However this ends – falling house prices or a generation even more excluded – it is going to be painful. But the sooner we recognise the causes of high house prices – our systems of money and planning – the sooner the problem can be properly dealt with.

Hear, hear.

[Hat tip Ziv Du]

Thursday, 13 August 2015

Landlord subsidies

The welfare weenies are slowly realising that the rent subsidy they pay to beneficiaries does little more than, guess what, go to subsidise higher rents – leaving landlords better off and beneficiaries as far behind the 8 ball as before.

The euphemistically titled Ministry for Social Development has just released a report about this little-studied area. Based on the limited evidence available however, it concludes (their words):

  • The literature review found evidence to support the contention that a proportion of demand-side housing subsidies is capitalised [sic] into higher rents in the private rental market.
  • Estimates of the magnitude of landlord capture vary from 30 per cent to 78 per cent of the increase in subsidy.

So in large part the so-called Accommodation Supplement is more accurately a Landlord Income Supplement – which when added to the middle-class rent/mortgage subsidy represented by the Welfare for Working Families scheme makes a sizeable supplementary hurdle to first-home buyers, in that when all those landlord/mortgage subsidies are capitalised they tend to further raise house prices.

You’d call it another example of the Law of Unintended Consequences, except that only a moron (or a welfare weeny) would think the consequence was unexpected.

There is no part of the economy more stuffed up and regulated by government than housing. So this is just one more distortion in what is already one of the most stuffed-up-by-government parts of the local economic system.

No wonder the housing market is broken.

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[Hat tip Lindsay Mitchell]

Tuesday, 9 July 2013

WARNING: Contains busybodies

_GawethYou don’t like swearing?

Well, do you like it less than New Zealand’s richest communist taking time out from a busy day telling the country what to put on their dinner plate to tell us we should all effectively have the state as our landlord.

Gareth Morgan: fuck you, and the dipshit ideas you rode in on.

You might have fooled the country’s worst performing bank  into taking your badly-performing donkey off your hands, but home-owners will be less forgiving.

Home-owners, be wary of a Gareth bearing recipes for new taxes on your house; you have nothing to lose but your freehold.

Thursday, 27 August 2009

Fat fools call for new taxes on rent and mortgages [update 2]

House_300x20030215 Everyone’s got a favourite tax they want to slap on someone to stop the exchange rate exploding and the housing bubble happening again.

Brian Fallow is the latest alleged economist to weigh in with a new tax burden to fix things.”Time to add GST to rents and mortgages,”says the Fat Man.  No Brian, it’s time you and your tax-hungry buddies stuck your head down a toilet and pressed flush. 

It’s not an answer to say that this would be “revenue-neutral.”  What rot. What serious student of politics would seriously expect any commensurate drop in income and company taxes to match the new ones. And what serious economist would want the serious dislocations that would happen when a tax on rents and mortgages was slapped on – not to mention the serious injustice of raising taxes on one group, even if you did drop them elsewhere.

Apparently it’s too much like rocket science to figure out what’s really wrong and to fix it.  Better instead to flap about strangling the residents while their house is burning down. 

Because it’s not rocket science to fix things. Here you go, let’s fix them:

  1. Fix the building regulations and the land controls that are still ramping up supply-side costs (even when demand has dropped), and
  2. stop the Reserve Bank inflating the economy with counterfeit capital

Do those two things and the problem disappears – and you don’t need to hand Bill English all the arguments he needs to put his hand even further into everyone’s pocket. Look at those two points in turn:

You see, the Reserve Bankers and their shallow, fallow supporters still maintain that the Reserve bank’s primary job is to set interest rates, print money, and allow banks to issue credit. They think this is a good thing (and some of then even labour under the illusion that an economic dictator setting interest rates and printing money is somehow a free market!)

And they think that the Reserve Bank is fighting inflation, when if they weren’t so blinded it would be obvious the Reserve Bank is actually creating it.*

Essentially you see, what happens when the Reserve Bank sets interest rates is that banks issue enough debt to balance out the supply-and-demand at that interest rate level. And under our fractional-reserve banking system that debt is then monetised (what Charles Holt Carroll called the Organization of Debt into Currency).  Under this arrangement for easy credit expansion, NZ’s M2 money supply had been increasing at a year-on-year rate of around 20% at the height of the boom, and was still increasing at a year-on-year rate at May this year of 10.7%. 

This is literally new money, created out of thin air.  And guess what happens when more money is chasing the same number of goods? (That’s right Virginia, you get what the mainstreamers call inflation. And the poor fools think the Reserve Bank is fighting it!) 

And guess where the lion’s share of that all that new money goes?  That’s right again, – although the mainstreamers are too blinded by their theories to see it, (mostly because they’re still thinking in the Keynesian aggregates that conceal most of the real economic facts), the lion’s share of that new money goes to people who borrow it.

You know.  People like home-buyers. Remember them?  Folk who get first use that new money and, when things start taking off, want to use it quick as they can before prices do the same.

DollarTrash This is what feeds the bubble. As Thorstein Polleit points out,

It is an inflationary regime. The relentless rise in the money stock necessarily reduces the purchasing power of money to below the level that would prevail had the money supply not been increased. Early receivers of the new money benefit at the expense of those receiving it later.

And that’s why it’s so easy to stop another housing bubble being inflated.  if you seriously want to stop it, then just stop inflating the money supply. 

Stop diluting it with new paper. 

Stop printing more of it. 

Stop creating credit out of thin air, and stop it with the nonsensical idea that a new tax will solve the problems that government itself has created.

Just stop it with the Reserve Bank Act’s inflation-mongering altogether, and leave us taxpayers alone.

We’re already over-burdened.

* * * *

* Inflation is what mainstreamers call it when prices rises across the board, right? But what they don’t even realise is that it’s the Reserve Bank who promotes general price rises across the board.

Ironic, huh?

Price rises, say the blind fools, are caused by wage-push, or cost-push, or demand-pull or some other failed excuse for not looking at the whole picture.  Because if you do look at the whole picture you understand that the only way you can get price rises across the board is if the money supply increases.  If some costs go up and the money supply doesn’t, then there must be a corresponding drop in prices elsewhere. If some wages go up and the money supply doesn’t, then there must be a corresponding drop in prices elsewhere. If demand goes up in one area and the money supply doesn’t, then there must be a corresponding drop in prices elsewhere to match the price rises due to demand.

The only way you can get price rises across the board is if the money supply increases.  And look who’s in charge of that.

Ironically, to squelch the price inflation that they themselves set off, the Reserve Bank then tries to squelch it all. And to do that, they do everything necessary to ramp up the exchange rate. 

But this Scylla and Charybdis of high finance isn’t inevitable – that is, is is not inevitable unless you refuse to take off your mainstream blinders and see things as they really are.  And in this context, that’s to realise that inflation is not essentially a measure of rising prices but of the rising money supply that causes them.

UPDATE 1The Visible Hand confirms that it’s never seen a tax it doesn’t like.  “Excellent” it calls Fallow’s disgraceful call for the IRD to put their hand in renters’ pockets.

    Well, I’ve not read the article, don’t have time to do so [don’t worry, you’re missing nothing], but from this I would say it’s not going to affect domestic rental investment, because I would assume that type of investment will no longer be a GST exempt activity, thus, landlords will be able to claim the GST on the interest back, plus will add GST to existing rentals to be returned. No difference to them.
    So who loses?
    Tenants, because they will have a 12.5% rent rise.
    Every house owner, especially low income house holders who will incur dramatically higher interest rates via the GST component, which they won’t be able to claim back, some of whom will thus be forced into rented ghettos, paying rents they can’t afford for the same reason.
    Another brain dead idea by a NZ mainstream economist who only seems to find ’solutions’ that include increasing the cost of living for kiwis by the likes of this, or further taxes. Why not advocate reducing the size of the State so the people that would be so badly affected by this ludicrous proposal could be given tax cuts - that aren’t simply to compensate for higher taxation elsewhere - and get on with their lives with the least amount of government, and economist, interference.
    PS: Matt, do you see a government implementing any new tax, and then cutting another tax.
    It doesn’t happen.

Exactly right.

Friday, 11 April 2008

Housing ignorance

Despite every government on the planet failing in their every attempt to provide quality low-cost housing and thereby stave off the various housing crises they've created (here for example is a particularly attractive housing complex that the East German government once created as 'model housing'), Tweedledumb housing minister Maryan Street is still empowered by the idea of Nanny State: Landlord!  She's just announced she plans to sell off some of the bigger ticket homes 'owned' by the state, not so she can get Big Government the hell out of the tenancy business, but so government can buy some cheaper ones with the windfall.  "We expect to buy two or more state houses for the value of one," she said, "and buy them in areas where the need is greatest." Ms Street is clearly unaware of the effect of adding the aggregate figure of $12 million to the price of housing "in areas where the need is greatest."

Meanwhile Tweedledee housing spokesman Phil Heatley says "I don't know what Labour are going to do [well, why not read their press releases, Phil, that's supposed to be your job], but National would be reinvesting such massive sale proceeds straight back into the housing stock."

Yes, way to decrease housing costs, dumbarse.  Tweedledumb, and Tweedledumber -- and some people think the Blue Team are somehow the answer. Sheesh.

Just for the benefit of these two brainndead fruit-loops, the only way to seriously decrease the cost of new housing  is to seriously decrease the costs that new house-builders face in buying land and building houses -- damned obvious you would have thought -- which means decreasing the exploding regulatory burden upon them -- which means at minimum sacking the planners, burning their district plans, and taking the power away from councils to zone and levy and  regulate.  I doubt that either of the two Tweedledumbarses would countenance anything like that -- instead they'll just sit tight and hope a recession does the job of lowering the price of housing, while both blowing smoke out their arse.

Here's the sort of smoke and mirrors I mean: forcing developers to build low-cost houses on high-cost land (further raising costs for anyone brave enough to contemplate new development), which Maryan is continuing to promote despite the scheme's obvious destructiveness; and  then there's the vaunted "Welcome Home" home buying scheme.  This last is a 100% tax-payer funded loan for houses up to $200,000 for people who banks have decided are too risky for a real mortgage.  How many pontifications have there been regarding the stupidity of offering 100% finance to people who can't afford it?  Have any NZ politicians been listening?

No matter, Labour obviously figure the target market for this fatuous fiduciary scam -- ie, core Labour voters too ignorant to have understood the reasons for the collapse of the American mortgage market -- will like the idea of someone doing something (anything!) however fatuous, which is why Labour are now running taxpaid prime-time TV ads to trumpet themselves and this bullshit while taking an end run around the Electoral Finance Act.  So they're not just inept, but corrupt as well.

Friday, 27 October 2006

Drinkers fingerprinted. Landlords threatened.

I hesitate to post this for fear it may give a local bureaucrat ideas. From Metro UK:

Drinkers could be asked to leave their fingerprints at the bar every time they buy a pint in a pub or club. They may also need to show a passport or a driving licence and their details will be held on a database available to police...

Some landlords were reluctant to sign up until they were told they faced having their licences revoked...

Guy Herbert, of privacy campaign group No2ID, said : 'People are having to post bail in the form of their fingerprints merely to have a drink.' Liberty's Doug Jewell added: 'The money for these schemes could be better spent on police services.'

Meanwhile, Tony Blair insisted there should be 'no limits' on expansion of a national police DNA database, saying it was vital for catching criminals.

Big Brother, bullying and threats to small businessmen. Just another day in the UK then.

LINKS: Drinkers to leave prints for pints - Metro UK

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Politics-UK, Beer & Elsewhere