Joe Biden Loves Rent Control, J.D. Vance Hates BlackRock
Republicans and Democrats have both managed to get worse on housing policy in the past week.

Happy Tuesday and welcome to another edition of Rent Free.
Last week, this newsletter offered a mostly negative assessment of both major presidential candidates' first-term housing records and likely plans for their second. In the past couple of days, things have managed to go from bad to worse on both sides of the aisle.
On Monday, former President Donald Trump selected Sen. J.D. Vance (R–Ohio) to be his running mate.
Vance is an outspoken protectionist, nationalist, and anti-corporate hawk who's bound to shift any future Trump administration in an anti-trade, anti-immigration, and anti-market direction. That can only mean bad things for the cost and availability of housing.
And today, President Joe Biden is expected to lay out a plan for federal rent control—a policy with a well-documented history of killing new supply that could undermine all the progress local and state governments have made liberalizing land use regulations.
So, at the risk of depressing readers, this week's newsletter will be another grim look at how both national parties are moving, in their own ways, in a markedly anti-market direction and all the negative implications that will have for housing policy.
Joe Biden's Radical Rent Control Plan
Yesterday, The Washington Post broke the news that Biden plans to unveil a nationwide rent control during a campaign stop in Nevada.
"Rent is too high and buying a home is out of reach for too many working families and young Americans," said Biden in a statement released this morning. "Today, I'm sending a clear message to corporate landlords: If you raise rents more than 5% on existing units, you should lose valuable tax breaks."
You are reading Rent Free from Christian Britschgi and Reason. Get more of Christian's urban regulation, development, and zoning coverage.
Biden has been dropping supportive comments about rent control for a few weeks now, so his more explicit, articulated endorsement of the policy isn't necessarily a surprise.
It is nevertheless a radical move. The federal government hasn't regulated rents at private buildings since World War II. There's a good reason for that. A mountain of economic evidence suggests rent control is a terribly counterproductive policy.
The research couldn't be clearer that where rent control policies suppress rents, they also suppress the supply of rental housing (by reducing construction or encouraging conversion of rental units to for-sale units) and reduce the quality of rental housing (by limiting investment).
The people who get a rent-controlled unit pay lower prices and stay in their units longer. The people who don't get a rent-controlled unit end up paying higher prices. Cities as a whole suffer from declining investment and economic growth.
A rent control policy adopted in St. Paul, Minnesota, saw an exodus of developers from the city. New York City's long-standing "rent stabilization" policy is producing vacant, dilapidated buildings that no one has the money to fix or redevelop.
Telling Exceptions
Biden himself seems to be conceding that rent control produces many of the problems it seeks to solve. Rather than abandoning the policy, he's instead decided to riddle his rent regulation scheme with carve-outs and exceptions.
Some of these exceptions may well limit the damage his proposal would do. They also make it a confusing, arbitrary mess that would award benefits to a near-random collection of renters.
Details of the new proposal are slight, but the Post reports that the president's plan would require landlords who own 50 or more units to cap annual rent increases at 5 percent for two years or lose an unspecified "tax benefit." These limits would not apply to new construction.
These provisions limit the number of units that would fall under rent control. That's good. But they compound rent control's long-standing problem of being poorly targeted.
It's hard to say why someone who rents from a landlord who owns 50 units of housing should have their rent capped, but someone who rents from a landlord who owns 49 units shouldn't. The same can be said for Biden's new construction exemption. If one thinks rent control is a good idea, why should only people who live in older construction benefit?
The Post's reporting doesn't mention Biden's plan including any sort of income eligibility limits, which is typical of most rent control policies.
That means that higher-income renters with the ability to absorb a rent increase could get protection because they rent from a large landlord, while lower-income tenants renting from a smaller landlord won't.
Going to Congress???
The people familiar with Biden's rent control plan who talked to the Post said it'll need approval from Congress.
That comment is a relief. It's a rare concession from the Biden administration that the separation of powers is a real thing. As an added silver lining, it suggests that Biden perhaps is not particularly serious about actually capping rents.
Biden has frequently stretched his executive authority to impose any number of progressive policies like student loan forgiveness and medical debt forgiveness.
Just this past week, the independent Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) announced they'd require owners of multifamily properties with Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae-owned mortgages to adopt a string of tenant protections. Those include giving 30 days' notice of rent increases, 30 days' notice of expiring leases, and a five-day grace period for late rent payments.
As a policy matter, those are incredibly modest tenant protections. As a legal matter, they represent an incredibly expansive view of FHFA's power to tell Fannie and Freddie what to do, says Mark Calabria, the former FHFA director under President Donald Trump.
FHFA was created in 2008 to act as conservator of Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae, and get the government-sponsored enterprises back on sound financial footing.
By requiring Fannie and Freddie to adopt those tenant protections, the agency is asserting its conservatorship powers allow it to force those government-sponsored enterprises to adopt whatever policies it thinks wise.
"I'm very much of the view that really broad policy changes that have nothing to do under the conservatorship can't be done under the conservatorship," says Calabria. "It's extremely weak legal authority." He compares it to the judge overseeing Hertz's bankruptcy requiring the rental car company to only rent out electric cars.
Tenant advocates and progressive Democrats have been pushing the Biden administration to use FHFA to cap rents at Fannie and Freddie-financed properties.
By forcing Fannie and Freddie to adopt minimal tenant protections, the Biden administration is essentially saying that it has the legal authority to require the companies to adopt rent control as well. By not requiring them to adopt rent control, his administration is implicitly conceding it doesn't think that's a wise and/or politically practical idea.
A Bad Message
The fact that Biden is unveiling a rent control plan so late into his administration while also putting the onus on Congress to act on it suggests the idea is more a messaging stunt to revive a flagging campaign than a real policy the president is actually eager to fight for.
Even if that's the case, that should provide cold comfort to rent control critics.
The president has enormous informal power to set the tone for policymaking. One would hope he'd use that influence to promote productive policies and condemn counterproductive ones.
Instead, Biden is putting the prestige of his office behind the repeatedly discredited idea that housing can be made more ample and affordable through government-imposed price controls.
Prominent moderate liberals are aghast at Biden's rent control plan.
"Rent control has been about as disgraced as any economic policy in the tool kit. The idea we'd be reviving and expanding it will ultimately make our housing supply problems worse, not better," said Jason Furman, the Obama administration's top economic advisor, told the Post.
"This kind of cap would lead to less affordable housing being built and substantially increase hosting costs," said Colorado Gov. Jared Polis on X.
This kind of cap would lead to less affordable housing being built and substantially increase hosting costs https://t.co/t8vkObEI1a
— Jared Polis (@jaredpolis) July 15, 2024
They're right to be worried. Today's half-serious campaign promise can become tomorrow's enacted policy. Anyone familiar with rent control's record should be very concerned about Biden's endorsement of the policy.
The Housing Policy Implications of Vice President J.D. Vance
Things are not looking much brighter on the Republican side of the aisle following the news that Trump has selected Sen. J.D. Vance (R–Ohio) to be his running mate.
Vance is an outspoken "national conservative" who has little time for traditional Republican commitments to free markets and free trade.
As my colleague Stephanie Slade wrote yesterday, Trump's selection of Vance as the vice presidential candidate marks a doubling down on his "America First" policy agenda.
The best thing one can say about Trump picking Vance is that the Ohio senator will do nothing to balance out all of Trump's ideas for making housing more expensive.
Trade and Immigration
For starters, Vance is an arch-protectionist who's endorsed Trump's call for 10 percent tariffs across the board. Slapping taxes on imported materials needed for housing construction would make the costs of construction higher, lower housing production, and ultimately raise costs for consumers.
The Republican Party's 2024 platform calls for deporting immigrants as a means of making housing more affordable.
Vance has been an outspoken proponent of this idea, saying on X last month that "not having 20 million illegal aliens who need to be housed (often at public expense) will absolutely make housing more affordable for American citizens."
There's a certain chilling logic to this idea: Lowering housing demand through mass deportations will lower housing prices as well.
New research however suggests the negative supply effects of kicking immigrants out of their homes outweigh any price declines caused by falling demand for housing. While immigrants consume housing, they also build housing. A recent study found that increased immigration enforcement creates a shortage of construction labor that lowers housing production and increases housing costs.
Corporate Scapegoating
Vance is also an anti-corporate hawk who could well encourage a future Trump administration to adopt any number of counterproductive restrictions on corporate involvement in the real estate industry.
He's been a frequent critic of institutional investors like BlackRock purchasing and renting out homes, arguing that this deprives ordinary Americans of the opportunity to be homeowners.
"They have access to lower interest rates. They have access to cheaper money, and they completely crowd out the availability for homes for people who want to just buy a piece of their community," said Vance last year.
But institutional investors' injection of capital and financing into the housing market is something that makes housing more accessible to ordinary Americans, not less.
Post-Great Recession restrictions on mortgage financing have made it a lot more difficult for individuals and families to finance the purchase of a new home. Institutional investors help mitigate this problem by buying up and renting out homes that Americans couldn't finance a purchase of their own.
Recent research has found where institutional investors are prohibited from purchasing homes, rental prices increase and lower-income households dependent on rental housing are excluded from exclusively owner-occupied neighborhoods.
Vance has also been a rare Republican proponent of Federal Trade Commission (FTC) Chair Lina Khan's aggressive anti-trust agenda, calling her "one of the few people in the Biden administration who I think is doing a pretty good job."
Under Khan, the FTC has said that landlords' use of rent-recommendation software likely amounts to illegal price collusion that drives up rents to above-market rates.
In fact, rent-recommendation software often leads landlords to lower rents faster in the face of falling housing demand. Where this software recommends landlords raise rents, that's a result of rising demand in markets with tight restrictions on new supply.
The Khan FTC's scapegoating of rent-recommendation software for higher rents ignores those market fundamentals. Through his support of Khan, Vance suggests that he's fine with that scapegoating.
Quick Links
- Police in Hillsborough, California, sent a letter to the owner of the Bay Area town's famous/infamous Flintstone House saying that a catered sushi pop-up restaurant at the home violated local zoning restrictions. The town had previously sued the home's owner, Florence Fang, for adding a bunch of dinosaur statues to the home's lawn without allegedly getting the proper permits.
- New York City Mayor Eric Adams' City of Yes for Housing Opportunity gets praise from supporters and heated criticism from opponents at a marathon City Planning Commission hearing. The New York City Council is expected to vote on the mayor's proposed zoning reforms this fall.
- The New York Times has a long opinion essay on why American elevators cost so much and what this reveals about America's failure to build.
- Chicago delays a vote on liberalizing accessory dwelling unit regulations.
- State-level reforms in California are reducing the time it takes to permit new homes in San Francisco.
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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*clears throat*
BOAF SIDEZ!
Sorry. Didn't catch that. What did you say?
Someone can be on one side or the other. Since no self-respecting person on the right would ever say "both sides" and admit that their side might be at fault, anyone who does so is not on the right. That leaves the left since one must be on one side or the other. That means anyone who criticizes both sides is a leftist.
QED
Rent control, the policy preference of the YIMBY movement!
[Gunnar] Myrdal stated, “Rent control has in certain Western countries constituted, maybe, the worst example of poor planning by governments lacking courage and vision.” 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.”
Coincidentally, each of my LLCs owns 49 units.
I have to admit, the near admission is eye-rolling. For months now, Britschgi has been on a crusade insisting that the answer to housing affordability is to universally impose high density low income housing on every leafy suburb in the country. Many of us have pointed out that problem is at least partly a consequence of large amounts of acquisition by institutional investors with a spigot to the Fed.
Now, we get, "Institutional investors help mitigate this problem by buying up and renting out homes that Americans couldn't finance a purchase of their own." And no suggestions of removing the restrictions blocking out normal Americans from owning their own home. Nope. Just turn everything into semi-urban sludge, give it to Blackrock and make the plebes rent.
I'm not sure if national conservatism is right. But, it's got to beat "own nothing and be happy" libertarianism.
Those investors were a large reason for increased pricing on homes the last 5 years as well, often leaving those homes empty and not actually renting them out.
Absolutely. It's a case study in the Cantillon effect. Blackrock and a few institutional investors got the money to buy up the assets and their buy up inflated the price. Pretending this is some sort of market solution is so dishonest as to be obscene.
The core issue is high demand from immigration and low supply due to zoning laws. Scarcity leads to more renting, since a monthly rent of $2000 is essentially a higher “bid” than a $2000 monthly mortgage. Institutional investment into rentals simply facilitates the market’s “auction house” mechanism of allocating a scarce good.
Normally, higher profits and thus investment would lead to greater production of housing and thus lower prices. That is the market’s fundamental price mechanism and why we love free markets. Problem is that zoning, permitting, and environmental laws effectively make producing sufficient housing illegal.
There’s high demand from immigration in blue states that subsidize rents and all living costs for Illegal immigration.
Free/subsidized stuff increases prices for people that pay for stuff.
Under the Biden Maladministration approximately 8-9 million illegal aliens have entered the USA. Has there been enough housing built in the entire USA to accommodate that many people? If not that is a net loss in available housing.
Unless the illegal aliens are building more housing than there are illegal aliens they are a net negative in that regard. Even if they were building enough housing the increased number of people would limit future housing possibilities unless the government freed up more land for housing development since space is limited.
"Under Kahn, the FTC has said that landlords' use of rent-recommendation software likely amounts to illegal price collusion that drives up rents to above-market rates.
In fact, rent-recommendation software often leads landlords to lower rents faster in the face of falling housing demand. "
Yeah... these are not even remotely mutually exclusive conditions.
Ah, yes; the Lake Woebegone rental market.
All units are above average.
Responding to outside changes in market conditions faster than a human only analysis can do in no way prevents the software from price colluding to keep rents at the landlords' optimum at all times. It just allows it to do so more efficiently. The juxtaposition of those two lines in such a way as to imply they are incompatible shows that Christian is either someone who fundamentally doesn't understand what he is writing about, or he's a disingenuous shitweasel hoping to pull a fast one over on the reader. Take your fucking pick.
"Biden plans to unveil a nationwide rent control"
Oh, boy. If there are two things that I really like and have proved to be totally effective with no downsides (or having the opposite of the stated intended effect), they are:
1. Rent Control
2. 1-Size-Fits-All national solutions
Rent control always, invariably, lowers both the quality and quantity of available housing, while actually increasing prices.
The gulf between the 'rent' situation in a moderate sized town in the Midwest vs. the giant coastal metropolises is so vast, that it's practically two different worlds.
We don't have the same problem they do. It's like giving me low-flow showerheads and dishwashers that don't work in an area that has cheap, abundant, plentiful water sources, and expecting it to help people in Southern California somehow.
Apologies to Sam Kinison,
So you need water huh? Here's an idea, GO WHERE THE FUCKING WATER IS!
You want to help world hunger? Stop sending them food. Don't send them another bite, send them U-Hauls. Send them a guy that says, "You know, we've been coming here giving you food for about 35 years now and we were driving through the desert, and we realized there wouldn't BE world hunger if you people would live where the FOOD IS! YOU LIVE IN A DESERT!! UNDERSTAND THAT? YOU LIVE IN A FUCKING DESERT!! NOTHING GROWS HERE! NOTHING'S GONNA GROW HERE! Come here, you see this? This is sand. You know what it's gonna be 100 years from now? IT'S GONNA BE SAND!! YOU LIVE IN A FUCKING DESERT! We have deserts in America, we just don't LIVE in them, assholes!"
"Yesterday, The Washington Post broke the news that Biden plans to unveil a nationwide rent control during a campaign stop in Nevada."
Vance "arm-waving"
Britschgic, are you really this imbecilic? Do you hope we are?
Britches, do you actually believe the shit you're selling? Or are you just paid well to join on the Vance hit pieces parade? But hey, both sides, right?
Let's see. 2008 crash, the government response was:
- Get a trillion dollar TARP slush fund (that never bought a single troubled asset, but was used for other things)
- Bail out all but one of the banks that caused it
- Never prosecute a single individual for the massive fraud committed, from ratings of the quality of the assets all the way to "robosigning" scandals, which is better known as "Forgery"
- Reward banks with zero interest rates, free money via quantitative easing, and allowing them to buy up assets during the correction while:
- Massively discourage individuals from purchasing with legislation like Dodd-Frank making it nearly impossible for a normal person to get a mortgage during the dip
Black Rock rose from this shit with a massive portfolio of real property and other assets, all heavily inflated by two decades of extremely low Fed rates and government policy.
So, let's talk again about which party is unconstitutionality proposing to intervene in the housing market, and which party is calling out the ill effects of bad government policies privatizing profits for huge business on the backs of socialized losses for the regular people.
Additionally, taxpayers are subsidizing those apartment or reit investors. Subsidized profits.
From the Denver Post: 6/24
“All told, Denver is projecting it will have spent $154.8 million on the mayor’s homelessness initiative by the end of 2024.
The city’s annual budget is about $4 billion.
A majority of this year’s one-time costs for the homelessness program — 86% — will be covered by federal dollars granted to the city, much of it related to COVID-19 pandemic support, according to Tuesday’s presentation.
City leaders are still hunting for money to pay for all of the program’s costs this year.”
It’s always better when taxpayers spread the costs to subsidize institutional investors:
https://www.thecentersquare.com/colorado/article_e4bef8ae-3f9d-11ef-96e1-e746bd271848.html
No wonder Polis knickers are in a twist. What will become of his family trust fund if taxpayers aren’t subsidizing it bro?
Post-Great Recession restrictions on mortgage financing have made it a lot more difficult for individuals and families to finance the purchase of a new home. Institutional investors help mitigate this problem by buying up and renting out homes that Americans couldn't finance a purchase of their own.
This -- right here. How fucking delusional do you have to be to parrot this fucking bullshit.
Let's see, government causes a problem. Some well connected big business gets to jump in and buy up all the real property that government stops people from buying and that's a good thing. From a libertarian magazine.
How about, if people can't afford the mortgages, the fucking prices of housing drops until people can afford the mortgages? Which is how a healthy market works. How about, make the banks responsible for their own fucking losses when they originate a fraudulent loan? They'll do their own policing on whether or not someone can afford the mortgage.
Fuck you Britchi. You're the reason for the meme "You'll own nothing and be happy".
How about, if people can’t afford the mortgages, the fucking prices of housing drops until people can afford the mortgages?...How about, make the banks responsible for their own fucking losses when they originate a fraudulent loan?
And this is the problem I've had with Britchi's entire YIMBY line. He presented it as build more to bring down the price so people can afford it. It turns out, nah!, build more so Blackrock can buy them up and rent them out with OPM.
It is well known in economics that as the scarcity of a leasable good increases, ownership drops and leasing increases. If supply increases then ownership increases. For example, if there were a quota on car production, then most people would be leasing their cars instead of owning them.
*applause*
As I posted on the VC comments, “National rent control – it’s like local rent control only worse!”
And the idea that deporting illegals frees up housing and so will lower rentals is very funny. Not anything anyone should take seriously, of course.
Sounds like a top-down idea JD Vance might like. For the working man, of course.
As bad as rent control in general is, why are there people getting "tax benefits" in the first place? And if that is the only way Biden intends to enforce rent control than it's not really rent control. It's just reducing subsidies.
This is hilarious, so much for the Democrats “Pay your fair share”
Nows about the time when Democrats will (re)float the idea of imputed income so that homeowners living in their paid-off homes would be taxed based on the rent they could have earned from their house if only they had rented it out.
My guess is that the "tax benefit" is being able to deduct your property taxes from income tax. Remember, with these guys, not taking is giving.
Would that not be a 'regressive' tax reform that primarily benefits the wealthy? Their terminology, not mine.
Depreciation. Expenses.
“ While immigrants consume housing, they also build housing”
Immigrants have NOT built nearly enough housing to even house the number that have crossed over the past 4 years. Primarily due to hypocritical zoning laws from blue city leftists. That is the main reason housing costs have gone up so much, not “remote work”.
BlackRock are fucking cunts, so, thanks for yet another reason to vote for this ticket.
Since when did 'the people' amend the US Constitution to allow Federal / [Na]tional housing authority?
Holy crap humans are stupid creatures. Affordable housing use to exist all over the place until [Na]tional So[zi]alist[s] decided to come in and made it Nazi-?affordable?. It's been consistently Nazi-?affordable? ever since. Exactly what the F'En Nazi's asked for.
Maybe, just maybe... What made (past-tense) the USA so great was the realization that Gov-'Guns' don't make sh*t ?affordable?. Their only human asset was to ensure Liberty and Justice for all.
"Rent is too high and buying a home is out of reach for too many working families and young Americans," said Biden in a statement released this morning.
And do you think importing 10M or so "newcomers" in the last 3+ years has had no impact on the housing market?
"Today, I'm sending a clear message to corporate landlords: If you raise rents more than 5% on existing units, you should lose valuable tax breaks."
Well, that's an opinion. Everyone's got one. Getting the tax code changed to actually do that, not so much.
One side is bragging about rent control. Government picking winners and losers
The other might make materials more expensive or you know what they should actually cost. Oh and they want to get the illegal immigrants out.
Yeah, both sides are the same. How far has Reason sunk? They should change the name to TDS, or We love Democrats ideas
Rent control - doesn't matter. Lots of people don't pay rent. In blue states, you can't force them out for months and months.
Then there are the squatters that have more rights than the owner.
Paying rent would be a step up for some dems