Rents Fall and Listings Increase After Javier Milei Ends Rent Control In Argentina
Javier Milei’s repeal of restrictive rent control laws increased housing supply and stabilized prices.

President Javier Milei's sweeping economic reforms have touched many sectors, but few have felt the effects more acutely than Argentina's housing market. His decision to repeal rent control laws late last year has reshaped the country's rental market, increasing housing supply and stabilizing rents.
The 2020 Rental Law, enacted under former President Alberto Fernández, aimed to protect tenants. It mandated three-year lease terms and required rent to be paid in pesos—a currency rapidly losing value due to rampant inflation. Rent adjustments were limited to once a year, based on a central bank rate that factored in inflation and wage growth. The law also allowed tenants to dictate the conditions for lease termination.
While the law seemed to offer relief for tenants, it backfired. By late 2023, one in seven homes in Argentina sat empty, yet Buenos Aires residents struggled to find available rentals.
Faced with inflation and rigid restrictions, landlords were hesitant to sign long-term leases. Many either set excessively high rents to hedge against future inflation or withdrew their properties from the rental market altogether. Others opted to sell in U.S. dollars or list them on short-term rental platforms like Airbnb, where they could charge in foreign currencies.
The crunch of rental properties triggered a full-blown housing crisis. As the supply of rental units dwindled, rental prices skyrocketed, far outpacing inflation. A study by the Institute of Economic Research of the Cordoba Stock Exchange found that rents increased by an average of 140 percent in inflation-adjusted terms between 2020 and 2023.
"In the last three years, the [number of properties in the] normal rental offer has shrunk to a size that I have never seen in my 25 years in the market," Diego Nocera, an estate agent in central Buenos Aires, told the Financial Times earlier this year.
In December 2023, Milei repealed the law as part of his broader push to deregulate the economy. The move sparked a shift in Buenos Aires' housing market: "For many locals, finding a new apartment had become 'mission impossible.' But after the repeal, Buenos Aires saw a doubling of available rental units, and rental prices have stabilized," reports Newsweek. The repeal also introduced more flexible agreements between landlords and tenants. Lease durations, if unspecified, now default to two years, and landlords can legally accept rent in foreign currencies—offering much-needed protection against inflation.
Buenos Aires, a city once gripped by a housing crisis, has seen a flood of available rental units. By June 2024, rental listings increased by 184 percent, with a 62 percent jump in May alone, according to Zonaprop, Argentina's largest property site.
As for rents, the influx of supply is offering much-needed relief to tenants. "While rents are still up in nominal terms, many renters are getting better deals than ever, with a 40% decline in the real price of rental properties when adjusted for inflation since last October," The Wall Street Journal reported.
Argentina's 2020 Rental Law, intended to protect tenants, ended up making housing unaffordable for the average Buenos Aires resident. The issue isn't unique to Argentina—rent control measures have had similar outcomes elsewhere. In San Francisco, expanded rent control laws led to in a spike in evictions. Meanwhile, in the Netherlands, rent caps have prompted property owners to sell their buildings and exit the rental market, according to Reason's Christian Britschgi.
Argentina's experience should serve as a cautionary tale for policymakers: Well-intentioned policies aimed at protecting tenants can sometimes backfire, causing more harm than good.
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Thankfully, no US potus candidate has articulated using price controls.
And the Reason staff would never vote strategically and reluctantly for such a candidate.
Or making any adjustments economically to help with housing for families.
We have much to learn from this man.
Mileinnials need to pounce?
"Argentina's experience should serve as a cautionary tale for policymakers: Well-intentioned policies aimed at protecting tenants can sometimes backfire, causing more harm than good."
There are many other lessons from Argentina which will be ignored.
The lesson they'll take is to ignore anything that happens in Argentina until Milei is gone.
Well-intentioned policies aimed at protecting tenants can sometimes backfire, causing more harm than good.”
There is no "can sometimes". Well intentioned or not, they ALWAYS cause much harm, and rarely any good.
"Well-intentioned policies aimed at protecting tenants"
The idea that these policies at this stage are ever "well-intentioned" is laughable. They're naked attempts at vote buying.
Will anyone learn anything from this important example? Bwahahahahahahaha!!!!
"Yeah; but what about grandma flying off the cliff and the lazy or I mean poor people?"
Endlessly touts the Leftards trying to draw sympathy for their crimes.
Maybe they should try this in NY and other progressive hellholes.
One of the most predictable outcomes in history.
True. Also one of the most predicted outcomes in history.
"Rents Fall and Listings Increase After Javier Milei Ends Rent Control In Argentina."
I'm voting for Milei as a write-in candidate.
He's the only politician in the world who has any sense.
"You can't give shit leftards an inch!...Because they're shit! You give them an inch, they'll use it to destroy you." --Pope Milei I
I too
Curious that if you simply remove the disincentives that desired behaviors become commonplace. While the motivations for punishing people because you suspect abuse may be seen a compassionate, the reality is that the action is far more disastrous than the possibility of a greedy landlord. The market left alone will self-correct far better and far faster than imposing the disincentives that government typically imposes.
Javier Milei appears to be making a real differences and like Uncle Jay is posturing, Javier Milei as a write-in candidate sounds like a better choice that what the Republiclame and Democraless parties are offering.