| >more people can no longer afford to buy but still need somewhere to live, causing the rent market to become more competitive It seems like you are double counting here. If high prices result in units becoming investor-owned and rented out instead of owner-occcupied, that means the rental supply is larger, so the foiled-owner-occupiers shouldn’t be crowding out more renters. To put it simply, we are fitting the same number of humans in the same number of buildings here, and just changing whether the person who lives there is the owner. > and the rents go up because owners charge what the market can bare Landlords always charge what the market can bear, how does the sale price of the unit move that number (other than the double counting argument above)? |
Of course, it's hard to measure this stuff precisely, because given the current attitudes, if you were doing that the last thing you'd do is report yourself to the government.
[1] https://www.theguardian.com/society/2017/aug/01/names-of-wea...