Economists Are Right To Hate Rent Control
Progressives like to argue that rent control policies that exempt new construction don't impact the construction of new housing.

Progressives keep trying to rehabilitate the reputation of rent control, and often misuse existing research to make their case that it's an effective policy with few, if any downsides.
The most recent example comes in the form of an essay for The American Prospect from Rutgers University economics professor Mark Paul, who argues "the neoliberal convention" that rent control is counterproductive policy is dead wrong.
"As recent empirical work has shown, the neoclassical account's core assumptions—one, that rent control restricts the supply of new housing; and two, that it misallocates existing housing, thereby causing an irrecoverable collective loss—fail to hold when it comes to the real world," he writes.
Given the lack of ill effects, rent control is basically free money, says Paul. Housing could be made more affordable and overall welfare enhanced by adopting nationwide rent caps of 4 or 5 percent of inflation, a policy he says is indistinguishable from the "rent control" provided by a 30-year mortgage.
Set aside for the moment whether Paul is right in his provocative claim that rent controlling someone else's house is the same thing as borrowing money from the bank to buy your own. Instead, let's start by asking whether he's right in his core assertion: does the research show that rent control doesn't reduce the housing supply? Judging by the studies Paul cites, it would be more accurate to say rent control doesn't reduce the supply of housing exempt from rent control.
While he describes "abundant evidence" that rent control doesn't negatively impact supply, Paul is relying on two studies that look at the effects of local rent control policies in New Jersey. He also cites one study that looks at the effects of a state-level repeal of local rent control policies in Massachusetts to argue that the repeal of rent control doesn't increase the housing supply.
To take the latter first: Paul cites a 2007 paper by David Simms, who examined the effect of a 1994 Massachusetts ballot initiative that repealed local rent control laws in Boston, Cambridge, and Brookline. Simms did indeed find no statistically significant increase in new housing after controls were repealed. That could plausibly be explained by the fact that these cities' repealed rent control laws didn't apply to new construction. Developers always had the right (zoning code permitting) to put up a new block of rental housing and charge whatever the market would bear. It is not a surprise that the construction of uncontrolled units didn't increase after the repeal of a policy that never affected them.
It's much the same thing for the New Jersey studies that Paul relies on. The two studies from 2007 and 2015 compare municipalities with rent control to those without rent control. Both found that rent control had little effect on new housing supply.
Yet these studies credit the lack of impact on new housing supply to the fact that New Jersey's "moderate rent control" policies generally provide exemptions for new construction. "The construction of new residential buildings continues because builders are exempt and reluctant to leave a familiar community," reads the 2007 study by researchers John Gilderbloom and Lin Ye.
Their paper also concludes that New Jersey's rent control policies have largely been ineffective at suppressing rent increases, writing that "moderate rent control in New Jersey stands as symbolic rather than distributional reform. Our research suggests that the pressure of real estate groups, government, and the courts has made modern-day rent control laws toothless in terms of their impact on rents."
The 2015 paper on New Jersey rent control, on which Gilderbloom is also an author, came to the same conclusions.
In other words, New Jersey's rent control policies are flexible enough to effectively let landlords charge market rents for their units. Because they're not controlling rents, they don't have the negative impacts rent control critics predict.
The flip side is they don't have the benefits tenant advocates want.
Rent control proponents want more than "toothless" and "symbolic" policies. They want laws that bind rents and require landlords to charge below-market prices for their units. The more those policies suppress rents, the more we can expect to see the oft-predicted adverse effects of rent control.
Indeed, the research Paul cites does provide ample evidence that rent control reduces the stock of rental housing by encouraging owners to convert their units to condominiums.
"There is weak evidence that rent control affected the extensive quantity of housing units supplied in Boston, but much stronger evidence that rent control led owners to shift units away from renting," reads the 2007 Simms paper on rent control in Massachusetts.
That's consistent with a more recent 2019 paper by Stanford economists Rebecca Diamond, Tim McQuade, and Franklin Qian, finding that the expansion of rent control in San Francisco led the owners of affected buildings to convert their units to condominiums.
We also have the example of rent control killing off the housing supply in St. Paul, Minnesota. In 2021, city voters passed a ballot initiative that imposed a 3 percent annual cap on rent increases without exemptions for new construction or allowances for inflation.
The result? Developers fled town en masse, walking away from already in-progress projects and canceling permit applications. The city hurriedly worked to weaken the voter-passed law.
The episode does not get a mention in Paul's article.
Paul suggests that rent control policies could be amended to limit condo conversions. It's unclear why he'd want to do that, given that he positively describes mortgaged, owner-occupied housing as a form of rent control. Would condos also not fit the bill?
There are significant differences between owner-occupied housing and rental housing. That's a good thing! The separate arrangements provide a different set of benefits that fit the differing needs of consumers.
Rental housing is an excellent option for people without the means to cover the upfront costs of buying a house or who are at a stage of their life where they might be moving frequently.
So long as rent control binds rent growth below market levels, it will reduce the supply and/or quality of rental housing. If it's sufficiently strict, we can expect it to reduce the net housing supply by killing off new construction.
Rent control proponents think some loss of quality and/or new supply is worth the stability that rent control provides to incumbent tenants. They should at least be honest about the tradeoffs they're foisting on property owners and people looking for a place to live.
Rent Free is a weekly newsletter from Christian Britschgi on urbanism and the fight for less regulation, more housing, more property rights, and more freedom in America's cities.
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Ho, hum ... yet another example of "How to Lie with Statistics." This reminds me of the University of Washington study commissioned by the City of Seattle a few years ago asking them to prove that much higher minimum wage laws would not adversely impact employment in King County. When a very carefully designed and carried out study proved conclusively that higher minimum wages would, in fact, reduce employment significantly, especially for the lowest end workers who could least afford to lose their jobs, the report was suppressed and they contracted instead with University of California at Berkeley socialists to fudge up a more satisfactory report.
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One part of rent control not discussed in these articles is the person NOT in a rent controlled apartment who wants to move into the rent controlled area. When I was young, and the LA area was just beginning to play socialist, I got bit by the rent control craze. I was working my first job in the LA area, and waiting for my next promotion to afford a move out of my inland dump to a nice waterfront place in Santa Monica. Then the peoples republic imposed rent control, and no one moved out so I could move in.
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economists dont "hate" rent control. They rationally understand what a disaster price controls are in general, and rents in particular, and dutifully try to explain it to the morons who crave it.
Exactly. Economists explain the results of rent control, which is bad for construction.
"Lefty moron doesn't understand economics, news at ... no wait. That isn't news."
The purpose of rent control on just old construction is to keep the poor people in thier place. While making them beg for it. It is classist and racist all in one. Keep those black people together where the progressives can't see them.
"Rent Control" = "Slumlord Maker"
Anyone who has lived in a rent-controlled area knows this firsthand--the landlord stops fixing things (because they can't afford to and still turn a profit) and then it gradually gets worse and worse. At some point the renters have to turn to the gov't to try to force the landlords to fix things, but you can't enslave the landlords any harder, so that's doomed.
The Gov-Guns will set the price on your rental property!!!
Sincerely, Your local [Na]tional So[zi]alist party (i.e. Democrats).
Yeah; that's right folks. This isn't the USA anymore; it is down right Nazi-Germany II.
Rent control has near nothing to do with the supply of new housing. It is moronic because it DOESN'T help with the supply of new housing and because it is a complete diversion to a reasonable goal of creating affordable housing stock.
You want to increase the supply of housing? Gotta increase the value of development and eliminate the value of speculation. Right now - everything in the US distorts that. A land tax is precisely what would change all that because it semi-effectively eliminates land price increases with a net zero tax rate on development. But of course land owners in the US WANT speculation and don't give a flying shit about development. Which is really freaking obvious when you look at the long-term new housing completion stats.
1968
One 'unit' - 859,000
2-4 'unit' - 77,000
5+ 'unit' - 383,000
2022
One unit - 1,022,000
2-4 unit - 10,000
5+ unit - 359,000
The US anti-develops the sort of housing stock that may at some time in the future become rental housing stock (which is existing not new). One family new construction is all fine and dandy but it requires sprawl and most cities have now reached the point where the costs of sprawl (transport cost and time) equal the benefits of sprawl (lower land prices). 2-4 unit new construction no longer exists in the US because of single family zoning. 5+ unit new construction has been declining for decades - despite free money. Or maybe BECAUSE of free money since free money rewards speculation and jacks up the price of land so that those units can only be built for a 'luxury renter' - aka AirBnB or foreign buyer or tax games investor. The 2-4 unit category is well beyond the point where new construction no longer even offsets annual 'destruction'. Apartment construction probably isn't there - but is certainly there for the 'affordable' price point.
As long as Americans believe that real estate speculation is the way to fund a retirement nest egg, US housing will become less affordable over time for those whose income isn't rising faster than annual speculation increases. The end game is a feudal rentier economy - with California the model for how that works.
"Rent control has near nothing to do with the supply of new housing."
There is stupid, there is abysmally stupid, and then there's STOOOPID on the level of JFree.
"...So long as rent control binds rent growth below market levels, it will reduce the supply and/or quality of rental housing. If it's sufficiently strict, we can expect it to reduce the net housing supply by killing off new construction..."
Further, so long as a government claims the right to stick its nose in a free transaction, which developer is stupid enough to assume there will be no extension of the controls?
Rent control doesn't work in a system driven by profit motive. As seen, doing things for money overrides doing it for moral or political values. You would need a large amount of people to agree to do a thing (create housing) simply because of the need of people to have it; and that just isn't likely in a capitalist society. In fact, if it was... the people who aren't onboard with that ideal would actively sabotage it to prevent their own potential profits from decreasing. (Crabs in a bucket theory). This would be great in some futuristic, sci-fi, Star Trek world or something , but it isn't going to fly in the here and now. You would need a large mental shift towards unselfishness , and ... yeah ... good luck with that. This is a waste of time.
If economists hate rent control, they should also hate homeowner subsidies and handouts.
Specifically:
1. No more zoning
2. No more government backed mortgages
3. No more 30-year mortgages
4. No more artificially low interest rates
5. No more tax deduction on mortgage payments
You're a libertarian, right? So how are you okay with government intervention in the housing market to benefit homeowners, but you're against it for renters?
Either both get government subsidies and handouts, or none of them do. You can't pick winners and losers.
"You’re a libertarian, right? So how are you okay with government intervention in the housing market to benefit homeowners, but you’re against it for renters?"
RTFA before making an ass of yourself. It doesn't benefit renters except those few who move it and stay forever; to the detriment of EVERY other renter.:
"So long as rent control binds rent growth below market levels, it will reduce the supply and/or quality of rental housing. If it's sufficiently strict, we can expect it to reduce the net housing supply by killing off new construction."
Congratulations, you just discovered that all subsidies have externalities. In the case of homeowner subsidies, it hurts those people who a) Don’t want to use debt to buy a home b) Those who are saving for a downpayment because the price of houses keep rising.
Everyone gets hurt with subsidies, so TAKE THEM AWAY.
Note that Reason doesn’t publish articles advocating for the removal of homeowner handouts. That’s because homeowners have latched on to the government tit so tightly, and for so long, that we’ve all forgotten that the leeches even exist.
“In many cases rent control appears to be the most efficient technique presently known to destroy a city—except for bombing.”
Economists are virtually unanimous in concluding that rent controls are destructive. In a 1990 poll of 464 economists published in the May 1992 issue of the American Economic Review, 93 percent of U.S. respondents agreed, either completely or with provisos, that “a ceiling on rents reduces the quantity and quality of housing available.”1 Similarly, another study reported that more than 95 percent of the Canadian economists polled agreed with the statement.2
The agreement cuts across the usual political spectrum, ranging all the way from Nobel Prize winners milton friedman and friedrich hayek on the “right” to their fellow Nobel laureate gunnar myrdal, an important architect of the Swedish Labor Party’s welfare state, on the “left.” Myrdal stated, “Rent control has in certain Western countries constituted, maybe, the worst example of poor planning by governments lacking courage and vision.”3
His fellow Swedish economist (and socialist) Assar Lindbeck asserted, “In many cases rent control appears to be the most efficient technique presently known to destroy a city—except for bombing.”
http://www.econlib.org
Hmmmm....right off the top: indexing it to inflation ignores all other circumstances of time and place. We are not an aggregate, dammit.
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