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by chimeracoder
4632 days ago
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> in the case of rent controlled apartments in NYC. This is not the issue. There are very, very few rent-controlled apartments left in NYC. Almost nobody who works in the tech industry here has one, because it requires having lived in the same apartment since the 1970s. If you have one, though, you could easily be paying 5% of market rent. Rent stabilization is a very different set of laws altogether, and these apartments are also vanishing slowly. As for true rent control, landlords would love it if their rent-controlled tenants were to sublet their apartment on AirBNB. That would allow the landlord to kick the tenant out and charge market rent - 20 times more - for the apartment. |
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You are right to make the technical distinction between NYC's "rent control" and "rent stabilization", but both have the same negative consequences for housing maintenance and creation.
According to [1], in 2011 about 47% of NYC housing units were rent-regulated.
[1] http://furmancenter.org/files/publications/HVS_Rent_Stabiliz...