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by crazygringo
1226 days ago
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> What happens in that scenario? Well, they should be sold. Exactly. They'll be sold to people who will live in them, and they won't be rented anymore. So if you want to move to a city for two years for a temporary job contract and rent a house... you literally can't. Because nobody will rent to you, because all the houses are occupied by owners living in them. Which is a disaster for rental demand. Remember that a lot of people want to rent. They prefer to rent instead of buy, for various reasons from flexibility to it just making more financial sense for various reasons. This is why if you take away the profit from renting, people who want to rent will be out of luck. |
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That still doesn't follow.
The total amount of housing stock will not change, and nor will the total amount of people needing housing of whatever type (besides some movement on the margins of both).
There is no reason to believe that, in an environment where renting is no longer a viable option, everyone will just shrug their shoulders and say, "Well, I guess all of this is necessarily going to be long-term purchase property, handled exactly the same way we handled homeownership before this change—big closing costs and all."
Yes, obviously, by definition, if renting is not an option, people who want to rent will be out of luck—but that doesn't mean that the people who want to rent today would have no viable options for housing after such a change took place. I don't know exactly what the solution would look like, because it would depend heavily on what specific changes we made that made renting properties out no longer viable, but it's really not that hard to imagine them.