Can you define "working well"? This thread is about an article indicating that rent control has led to less multifamily housing development, and many people in this thread have indicated that this means rent control is "working well." It sounds like you have a different definition. |
“Working well” means rents have fallen since the regulations came into force. The main point of supply side housing policy — as articulated by its supporters — has been to lower housing costs. Rents have fallen more since the regulations came into force than they have in all the years of supply side policy. As for whether production slowing is wholly attributable to rent control or rents falling, it has been this county’s experience that production stops when rents fall. In this case, rents have fallen, vacancy has increased, and unemployment has increased. All of this has happened even as the market continues to deliver more units. No one in their right mind would start a project now with or without rent control. |
But they economic conditions are similar elsewhere, yet other places are still seeing projects move forward. What else is unique to MoCo other than rent control? |
Increasing the supply and lowering the cost of housing. |
20 years of this approach resulted in a housing crisis (YIMBYs’ characterization, not mine). After one year of rent control, rents are lower. |
Rents are also lower in jurisdictions without rent control so that doesn’t prove anything. |
The pp wasn't being serious. |
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Sounds good to me but nice try, real estate PR team. Nobody wants your cardboard apartments.
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| It's not part of a concerning trend. I'm so tired of Dan Reed and GGW and their endless whiny propaganda. There's plenty of building going on in MoCo. |
| If people are worried about affordable housing, is there anything to be done about the developers in our neighborhood that tear down houses in the 800K range and replace them with ugly monstrous houses that they are trying to charge 2.4M for? When we moved here 15 years ago it was such a nice neighborhood with nice normal houses and every year the new hosing just gets bigger and bigger. I think it’s finally hit a ceiling as the last two houses are just sitting there with no buyers. |
People will go with whatever makes the most money. You can't really stop people from building nicer houses, so the only thing you can really do is to provide similarly lucrative ways to build smaller, cheaper homes. More specifically, build multiple townhomes, duplexes, etc. on a single lot. |
There are more stringent stormwater management regulations as well as fire, utilities, and road widths. |
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It is hilarious to see developers lose their minds over a law that limits rent increases on 23-year-old buildings to almost 3x the historical norm. It is almost as if they never really meant all that talk about lowering prices by building more housing and that they don’t really believe in filtering. If anything they said had been true, the rent increases in these 23–year-old buildings wouldn’t even be close to the cap. You’ve all shown your true colors. If only you hadn’t colluded illegally to raise prices. If only people like Equity hadn’t come in with double-digit rent increases after buying older buildings. You’d still have your nice setup here.
Sorry not sorry you’re going to have to figure out a different way to extract rent from the land you overpaid for. Maybe just sell it at a loss so building something has a better chance of penciling out for someone else. |
***Developer alert, developer alert***. We don't want your multifamily housing where SFHs are currently. Go take that nonsense to Arlington. |
Ok, I don’t want to stop people from building nicer houses. Why are you interfering in the market? I thought that the YImBYs were all “, “iT’s eCOnom S 101 Durr?” |