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by AnthonyMouse
2707 days ago
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Not only that, some of the people who prefer to buy rather than rent and can afford the higher prices may buy other properties that would otherwise have been rented out, reducing the supply of available rental properties and thereby raising rents. Rents are essentially always proportional to real estate prices, otherwise there would be an arbitrage opportunity one way or the other. Meanwhile the way a normal market responds to high rents is by building more rental properties, because when rents are high doing so is profitable. But that requires buying existing land and constructing new housing on it. If the existing land is owned by people who are neither developing it further nor selling it, that can't happen. Which is particularly problematic in places with restrictive zoning, because they could be sitting on the specific properties that are zoned for higher density than what they're currently built to -- and those are exactly the properties you would want to buy if you were an oligarch speculating on real estate. |
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They don't necessarily need to receive rent payments to 'clean' the money. It's possible that what is regarded as money laundering in their country of origin is not regarded as such in the country where they are buying the property.