Will Labour Introduce Rent Controls?

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 26 ต.ค. 2024
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    For years, London Mayor Sadiq Khan has wanted to impose rent controls in the capital to curb the expensive prices put on renters. So what do the Mayor's plans for renting actually look like? And now that Labour are in power, is this more likely to happen?
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ความคิดเห็น • 1.5K

  • @jommydavi2197
    @jommydavi2197 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +32

    Stop rich foreigners from buying up blocks of flats for investment and money laundering, driving prices sky high

  • @apjtv2540
    @apjtv2540 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +98

    Getting a fire under control is one thing but, at some point, you have to actually put out the fire and rebuild what it destroyed.

  • @billyosullivan3192
    @billyosullivan3192 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +726

    People will try everything before building more houses

    • @chrisjie2127
      @chrisjie2127 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +73

      The issue is having houses where people want to live (central London/Bristol/Cambridge etc.). There's no shortage of actual dwellings overall. It's an obsession with crowding our society/economy around a small number of economic hubs. It's a never ending downward spiral.

    • @Alex-hv7tu
      @Alex-hv7tu 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +70

      @@chrisjie2127 No, both house prices and rents have increased substantially in most parts of the country. Also, government statistics on population growth and house building prove that, no matter what way you look at it, not enough houses are being built. There are also not that many empty dwellings nationwide, certainly not enough to provide a solution to the housing crisis. There is, in fact, a massive shortage of actual dwellings overall.

    • @tremarley9648
      @tremarley9648 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

      @@chrisjie2127finally a sensible comment

    • @PaulB-q3d
      @PaulB-q3d 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      10 million in over the decade has no impact I suppose.

    • @foxbat51
      @foxbat51 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +31

      Building more houses won't help if they are just bought by more landlords and used to harvest people's wages. Councils need to build more houses, so that people from poorer areas can move where there is work, and so they don't have to pay private landlords to house people at inflated rates. We have enough houses, they are just in the wrong hands.

  • @weird_autumn42
    @weird_autumn42 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +736

    the whole housing system is fucked. why is having a place to live treated like a commodity?

    • @Kalimdor199Menegroth
      @Kalimdor199Menegroth 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +141

      Because it is a commodity?

    • @mathyeuxsommet3119
      @mathyeuxsommet3119 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +55

      You mean investment,those are two different things.

    • @pebblepod30
      @pebblepod30 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +47

      ​@@Kalimdor199Menegroth
      That is a choice.
      I note that in the entire history of housing crisises, and them being solved, was it ever solved by it being treated like a commodity?
      No, i cannot think of a single historical example of that, can you?
      Yet there are many historical examples of mass support for ending a housing crisis, leading to Govt building more housing and that solved it and it doesnt cost anything, even makes money (bc govt sells it or leases it).
      Historically, it has even been solved with less technology and worker and material shortages.
      Would you like to know those examles?
      Vienna, Singapore, Australia and UK after ww2, Auckland city, USSR under Krustushev.

    • @TheUndulyNoted
      @TheUndulyNoted 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Because we’ve allowed 10s of millions of unproductive migrants to move here, allowed them to take up social housing as a priority over natives if they have children, not built new social housing, and allowed a monopoly of property developers to control the flow of new builds into the market via a system of red tape that makes it impossible for a normal person to build on land they own.

    • @pebblepod30
      @pebblepod30 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +12

      ​@@Kalimdor199Menegroth
      Could you pls give me a counter examle?
      And historically, hasnt housing being a commodity caused the housing crisises?
      I recommended Economist Cameron Murry on this topic, because he is not paid for by Swap Donor Class Owned Media.

  • @L.C.Sweeney
    @L.C.Sweeney 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +343

    In Sweden you can only buy to let one property per household and only for a maximum of two years and the government prioritise house building. Rent is affordable.
    Edit: there is a huge amount of rent control in Sweden. Not only that, but the amount you can sell your house for is also capped. Both numbers are capped mainly based on the size of your property and the area it's in. This prevents people from being able to make a large amount of profit from flipping.
    Also, whether or not you can rent an apartment in a buy to let scenario is voted on by a committee of home-owners in the apartment's block. You can only rent out your apartment if the committee agree to let you do so.
    Furthermore, Sweden has the second lowest average age of first time buyers IN THE WORLD at 24-years-old.

    • @isaacmason3939
      @isaacmason3939 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +35

      Scandinavia might not always have popular solutions but they always work

    • @donaldkinsey5245
      @donaldkinsey5245 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +67

      In Sweeden, housing isn't affordable because of their cap on owning property. It's affordable because the supply of housing is sufficient to meet the demand. That's the exact opposite situation in London.

    • @davescott7680
      @davescott7680 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +56

      This. Rent control isn't the answer. People owning multiple rental homes and pushing up cost of housing everywhere is the root cause problem.

    • @davescott7680
      @davescott7680 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

      ​@@donaldkinsey5245if you can buy multiple houses. That takes a house away from a owner occupier, who potentially has to save longer and adds competition to rent. Obviously building houses is important, but not having people stuck renting because house price gone through stratosphere is a massive contributor.

    • @L.C.Sweeney
      @L.C.Sweeney 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      @donaldkinsey5245 it's a mix of both and that's why I mentioned both aspects.

  • @jonathanbayley1551
    @jonathanbayley1551 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +92

    Rather than rent controls, why not heavily tax housing that is not in use. There is a lot of housing owned by the wealthy that sits unused, treated as a commodity that accrues value, rather than shelter for people that need it. Oh, and build more. Demand is high, increase supply.

    • @kiuk_kiks
      @kiuk_kiks 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Plutocracy wouldn’t allow their political pawns to ratify such laws.

    • @SmileyEmoji42
      @SmileyEmoji42 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      That makes no sense. Renting out a property doesn't prevent its capital value going up so why would you turn down free money by leaving it empty. Most properties are left empty waiting for planning permission. There are second homes but they are not that common.

    • @SaintGerbilUK
      @SaintGerbilUK 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Because Sadiq and most MPs have a property in London so they can be in Westminster and also in their constituency.
      Well any career MP who you'd recognise anyway.

    • @bearwynn
      @bearwynn 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@SmileyEmoji42because there is work and such involved with renting out.
      just leaving a house vacant requires next to no work and the value will just keep going up

    • @kuto608
      @kuto608 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      You know what, this is actually a good idea. I'm normally against more taxes but empty properties need to be dealt with and the solution isn't rent control but more housing.

  • @AntonSjöstedt
    @AntonSjöstedt 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +229

    From Sweden here. Yeah, rent controls do not work. We have them here in the biggest cities. Nobody wants to build or maintain rental properties, so home-buying prices have skyrocketed instead. The waiting list is many years long, and the shortage has been described as hindering overall growth. Many economists have wanted to sack this system for years, but since government is Sweden is mostly left-wing (and people living in these rent-controlled flats have a lot of political power) it has not happened. The left-wing always say that massive subsidies to the building-sector will solve everything, which it generally does not. PS. Not forgetting the huge black market for second-hand renting.

    • @MaIibou
      @MaIibou 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +12

      I see what you're saying, and this has been the case for the years prior, but since the right-winged parties in sweden now hold a majority (government coalition + SD) shouldn't they in theory be able to get rid of this?

    • @dubliam8064
      @dubliam8064 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +21

      The current Swedish government is right wing

    • @ziglaus
      @ziglaus 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +29

      Why does the building sector even need subsidies? Is a massive, years-long, list of buyers not a good enough incentive to build?

    • @madpig7120
      @madpig7120 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +20

      ​@@ziglausbeware you are almost going to find out that the market doesn't regulate itself

    • @David_Box
      @David_Box 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@madpig7120 What do subsidies have to do with regulation?

  • @HighAcuity
    @HighAcuity 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

    2080 being AVERAGE rent in London is absurd. During my time renting in London I paid £250k. I could have bought a house with that elsewhere in the country. Renting is tantamount to slavery. You work obscene hours to the point where you're barely home enough to enjoy the overpriced flat you rent and at the end of the month you give a huge chunk of your wages straight into the bank account of your landlord. It's disgusting and wrong.

    • @discostu2
      @discostu2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Buy a house then?

  • @LochyP
    @LochyP 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +95

    That 40% is a strange statistic to mention. Spending one year will either be higher or lower than the previous. So a 40% decrease actually suggests that most landlords have INCREASED repairs spending in Scotland. Was there a category for "maintained the same spending"?

    • @solomonsmith3658
      @solomonsmith3658 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      Am I missing something here? If 44% of landlords have stopped or decreased the amount they’ve spent on maintenance, how does that mean that maintenance has increased?

    • @solomonsmith3658
      @solomonsmith3658 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

      Oh I see your point, suggesting that 56% have therefore spent more money on maintenance

    • @mattmathematics3591
      @mattmathematics3591 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      😂 ive lived in rent for the last 10 years and only one of the landlord s actually fixed anything

    • @danguee1
      @danguee1 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      That's a statistic from people who don't actually understand numbers even though they use them ALL THE TIME in their videos. Yes: there could have been a 44/56 split between reduced-or-stop and maintained-or-increased. OR it could be (say) 44/35/21 for reduced/maintained/increased. We weren't given enough information. So, that figure doesn't help us understand at all....

    • @danguee1
      @danguee1 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@mattmathematics3591 Your anecdotal experience and crying laugh emoji is noted

  • @-M_M_M-
    @-M_M_M- 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +21

    People and politicians must understand that prices are signals, they are consequences of something. If you limit or mess with prices you will create discordination issues that will just make the situation even worse.

    • @annabarr1304
      @annabarr1304 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Once Paris set rent control and especially rules about not being able to rent out anything under 9m, lots of properties went on sale.

  • @alexanderjamesreed935
    @alexanderjamesreed935 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Simple really. Ban buy-to-let. You should not be allowed to buy a house unless you're going to LIVE IN IT. Suddenly the value of housing plummets, making both buying affordable and renting affordable.

  • @bubbadog9145
    @bubbadog9145 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +414

    something drastic needs to be done and quickly too. its literally becoming unaffordable to have shelter.

    • @lordsummerisle852
      @lordsummerisle852 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +25

      Why not reduce taxes and red tape for landlords?
      It's as if incentivising investment in the sector will increase supply

    • @hassantaibaly293
      @hassantaibaly293 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +96

      @@lordsummerisle852because do you really think landlords will decide to reduce their margins if tax is reduced? They’ll just maintain their prices and get more revenue

    • @mathyeuxsommet3119
      @mathyeuxsommet3119 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

      ​@@hassantaibaly293Or more realistically they would invest in new development and spread out cost,there is no world where this can be bad for the housing supply.

    • @precariousworlds3029
      @precariousworlds3029 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +32

      subsidizing demand is dumb and will make the problem worse. we need to build more, we have a massive housing shortage.

    • @stormsurge1
      @stormsurge1 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +13

      Maybe stop importing new people?

  • @fabianstoll
    @fabianstoll 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +217

    Build more houses. Remove height restrictions, and you will get more homes and therefore lower prices.

    • @precariousworlds3029
      @precariousworlds3029 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +29

      No bro we just need to give everyone money to buy houses! thats the real solution, what can go wrong?

    • @Sirlarrythecat
      @Sirlarrythecat 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Great idea but where are the builders going to come from to build the houses add to the cost of building materials which is mental thanks to Brexit.

    • @npcknuckles5887
      @npcknuckles5887 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +14

      The town and country planning act prevents all of that.

    • @SupremeST25
      @SupremeST25 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

      @@precariousworlds3029idk if you’re being sarcastic but this is the actual solution. The problem really isn’t that there aren’t enough houses, it’s that the price of houses (alongside everything else) have skyrocketed yet wages have stayed the same since the early 2000s.

    • @ukwatotskuhide270
      @ukwatotskuhide270 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

      @@Sirlarrythecat Stop subsidising or giving loans on useless degrees and pour the money into apprenticeship schemes, when people get told either pay 200,000 for your English degree with 0 job prospects or take this apprenticeship scheme and start earning 30,000 a year straight away, people will start changing their priorities fast.

  • @PixelBurstHD
    @PixelBurstHD 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +219

    Multi-home tax that increases on each subsequent property is the only way to fix this awful system, but too many of them have stakes in property themselves to give a damn. Labour, Tory, no difference except the color of their ties.

    • @lordsummerisle852
      @lordsummerisle852 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +15

      What, so increasing taxes on housing providers is going to help?
      Erm okay

    • @mathyeuxsommet3119
      @mathyeuxsommet3119 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +13

      "The only way to fix the system"cruel lack of imagination,this is not even a good idea.Just use land value tax.

    • @stephenlee5929
      @stephenlee5929 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      So no housing associations?

    • @ziglaus
      @ziglaus 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +38

      ​@@lordsummerisle852nobody said anything about taxing the construction companies who provide housing. Just taxing people who hog all the housing

    • @takiherosquires1372
      @takiherosquires1372 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      Well its simple, make it illegal for companies to own residential properties.

  • @richardfox4803
    @richardfox4803 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +92

    A London Rent control would be a disaster with a drop in properties being rented and a decrease in quality of the remaining housing stock. Something needs to be done with the rental market, just not Rent caps. Following Barcleona with a ban on AirBnB in London would be a good start. Tax break for REITs focusing on the residential sector who conform to additional standards would be a clever way. Or call me crazy, build more properties.

    • @yurisei6732
      @yurisei6732 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      I hadn't realised how bad the AirBnB problem was until I got home from my summer holiday to see five new key boxes on my building, which means in the past year half of the ten flats have been turned into holiday rentals - and I don't even live in a place that gets a lot of tourism.

    • @editorrbr2107
      @editorrbr2107 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Banning REITs and RE SPACs is a better start

    • @revilokid
      @revilokid 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Why would renting be dropped by home owners? It would still be an extra source of income that the house is generating for the homeowner. Even though it’s less money would it not be still attractive to do?

    • @shadyside
      @shadyside 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      agree airbnb's need to go

    • @mrcaboosevg6089
      @mrcaboosevg6089 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Making it law that only the British/EU members can own property would make a lot of difference. It's actually ridiculous how many hundreds of billions of pounds in dodgy money is in London

  • @Darth_Tyranus_
    @Darth_Tyranus_ 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +47

    If you think the market is bad now, just wait until what happens when there’s rent control.

  • @languist
    @languist 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +21

    Rent controls will only be beneficial to CURRENT tenants, not future tenants. Long-term, rent control has been disastrous.

  • @Setanta1913
    @Setanta1913 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

    Maybe less unvetted migration would help.

    • @arcan762
      @arcan762 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      REMIGRATION NOW!

  • @MaxpunchIDK
    @MaxpunchIDK 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +19

    Rent controls in a nutshell: easy short term political win, mid to long term disaster.

    • @matsal3211
      @matsal3211 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      No, rent control should be seen as an add on rather then a single policy to pass.

    • @nunyabidness3075
      @nunyabidness3075 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Very succinctly put. It’s made a worse problem everywhere it’s been done. What I don’t get is why the young Marxists can’t figure out why it’s really a subsidy for large London employers and power brokers at mostly the cost of small land lords.

  • @agnestuza5206
    @agnestuza5206 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

    If Labour stops overtaxing landlords, they will decrease prices. As a comparison:
    £1,350 rent
    (-) £450 tax (40% bracket)
    (-) £650 mortgage interest
    (-) £140 agent fees
    (-) £150 service charge.
    ---
    £40 _loss_ to the private landlord. Why do you think your rent is high?

    • @SaintGerbilUK
      @SaintGerbilUK 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      Simple and straightforward, that's why it'll never catch on. People are too jealous of landlords as it is.

    • @Burito-tj5ry
      @Burito-tj5ry 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      Or they wont lower the rent and pocket the difference... "Should i make more money?" man such a hard question to answer

    • @hustlinmagic
      @hustlinmagic 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      People think Landlords make a fortune, they really don't understand the costs involved.
      And you are actually missing some stuff. Maintenance, compliance fees, void periods and god forbid you have any tenant or legal issues.

    • @SaintGerbilUK
      @SaintGerbilUK 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@Burito-tj5ry if you have 3 properties more or less the same the rents are £2,000, £2,000 and £3,000 which one are you going to pick?
      Almost like the buyers dictate the price.

    • @hustlinmagic
      @hustlinmagic 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      @@Burito-tj5ry Way to simple a way to look at it.
      For example, I'd rather have good tenants paying less than bad tenants paying more. I'd rather have a long term tenant paying less, than have short term tenant pay more.
      There is a balance.

  • @TheRustyLM
    @TheRustyLM 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +71

    Rent control is sold to the people as temporary, but it ALWAYS becomes permanent.

    • @kj4748
      @kj4748 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +19

      As it should be.

    • @benchoflemons398
      @benchoflemons398 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +23

      @@kj4748no, it reduces housing supply and increases costs long term.

    • @TheRustyLM
      @TheRustyLM 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

      @@kj4748 EVERY place it’s been implemented it just makes the problem worse.
      It’s a supply problem. Think about it.

    • @georgemangco2526
      @georgemangco2526 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      True, rent control *on its own* always reduces housing supply and increases costs. Thankfully this government finally recognizes that problems take more than one course of action to fix, which is why they've come around the supply end of the equation with the new homebuilding plan. Of course rent control should be permanent, any solution to a problem has to be.

    • @brrrrrrrrrrrk
      @brrrrrrrrrrrk 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Spoken like a true land lord, aw but my business won't survive. Yeah who cares

  • @XDontConformX
    @XDontConformX 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    London is very quickly becoming like a country within itself

  • @justinstephenson9360
    @justinstephenson9360 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +19

    Rent controls do not work. We have proved that repeatedly. Every time rent controls fail, those in favour simply claim it was "old style" rent controls that failed and the new generation of rent controls will work. I believe that the currently completely failing Scottish rent controls are 3rd generation rent controls (whatever that means), so no doubt Khan's ideas would be 4th generation rent controls - which will inevitably fail.
    There is only one solution to rising rents which has proved to work - build more properties to rent. Only problem is that the private sector is not prepared to invest enough to do that, mostly thanks to underlying trends in regulations supported by all main political parties. So the solution to London's rental crisis is to build a lot more social housing by public funded entities something Khan has been very bad at delivering

    • @moneyobsessed
      @moneyobsessed 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      "we never tried REAL rent controls"

    • @justinstephenson9360
      @justinstephenson9360 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@moneyobsessed Of course we have in all of UK, in various guises from 1915 to 1989 and in Scotland from 2022 to date. But of course you did not know that, so much was before your time. You are no different to those who spout how the latest generation of rent controls are different to the previous versions (or to use your terminology how the latest version are "real" rent controls and somehow the past were not) and will definitely "work" this time - except they do not

    • @savvagrachev2754
      @savvagrachev2754 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@justinstephenson9360 You make only valid points but just saying, they're agreeing with you. They're just joking like those people who say ''we've never tried REAL communism''.

  • @lahiru6861
    @lahiru6861 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    same issue is in Manchester. living in a one bedroom apartment and our rent went up from 955 to 1050. and when trying to go to a new place we have to bid higher amounts to secure the places, but the amounts are unreasonable

  • @NuSpirit_
    @NuSpirit_ 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +37

    Yeah rent control is almost never the solution. We have rent controlled housing in my city (still from socialist era) and those houses/apartments are often in sorry state as landlords simply cannot afford repairs above what is required (with taxes, fees and severely capped rents) and you have to wait 10+ years for something to be available. On contrary market rates are high (though not much higher than mortgage) but you often get newer/modern building, better services, parking space, no need to pay for repairs/taxes on the house.
    And the solution? Building more, not taxing more or restricting landlords. The plans here are to build around 50 000 more units/houses in next 10 years in various areas of the city. One project is building completely new part of the city in 5 km by 1.5km plot of land with housing, shopping centre, hospital, schools/pre-schools, tram, roads, new park, etc.

    • @wackypeace1135
      @wackypeace1135 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      Building more won't help alone, they'll just be snapped up by the super rich as investments, which in turn will drive up prices/costs.

    • @xemorr
      @xemorr 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      I think the plans suggested by khan / labour think tanks are second order rent controls rather than first order. This means that it'd be a cap on the annual increase of rents, rather than a cap on rents overall. This means it could be similar to a pension triple lock idea, where it can only go up by the higher of CPI or wages for example.

    • @NK-vd8xi
      @NK-vd8xi 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Taxing more IS the solution. Taxing on the value of the land makes landlords actually try to compete.

    • @TheCappucinochannel-os4ne
      @TheCappucinochannel-os4ne 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@wackypeace1135 That's monopolistic, and breaking monopolies is one of the only things a government can do in a capitalist economy that does more good than bad.

    • @serebii666
      @serebii666 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@xemorr "pension triple lock idea, where it can only go up by the higher of CPI or wages for example." Houses are not like people, they cannot get up and move to an area with lower costs of living. Even such limits will inevitably result in dilapidation, since costs of living and inflation do not change equally throughout the country.

  • @datageekkarting8372
    @datageekkarting8372 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

    You SHOULD be saying rent control is a bad idea: IT IS A BAD IDEA.

  • @BotswanaEnjoyer32
    @BotswanaEnjoyer32 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +35

    Rent control is like the one thing that nearly every economist agrees is bad. Unaffordable housing is an availability problem and rent control makes availability significantly worse

    • @GG-hu9dn
      @GG-hu9dn 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      For property owners, I guess it is?!

    • @joey-pn3xe
      @joey-pn3xe 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@GG-hu9dnyou should check out a current live case study in Scotland. Rents have shot up way more than places without rent controls.

    • @GG-hu9dn
      @GG-hu9dn 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@joey-pn3xe Incredible, that this has happened?! It is completely unsustainable?!

    • @joey-pn3xe
      @joey-pn3xe 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@GG-hu9dn it doesn’t work. Basic economics tells us we have a supply problem but no one wants to fix that. Building targets have never been met since they started recording them!

    • @GG-hu9dn
      @GG-hu9dn 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Nothing to do with buy to rent then?? And / or laundered money being parked into corrupt UK inflated property market? Or inheritance? I mean, it's a complete joke of - a - country?!

  • @dorianodet8064
    @dorianodet8064 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Once again, the issue is not land-Lord vs not land lord. It's supply vs demand. On the demand side : Find way to make companies move their headquarter and high paying job outside London and people will follow. On the supply side, punish empty-house with steep taxes, remove zoning law, promote constructing etc ... and price will go down.

  • @StylerDj
    @StylerDj 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

    The MP's own most the properties in London and in UK. Its all done by design and some landlords are using this situation to exploit renters.

    • @SmileyEmoji42
      @SmileyEmoji42 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      They really don't you know. There just aren't that many MPs and most of them are not that rich.

    • @Bozebo
      @Bozebo 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      All landlords otherwise an agency won't "take" instruction and they'll have to manage it themselves. Agencies force them to maximise profits, though in the London market most wanted to do that anyway so it's not quite as insidious.

  • @jakenicol4012
    @jakenicol4012 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Rent controls are completly normal policy throughout Europe. In the UK the suggestion is radical and unthinkable. You can't save this country. Too small minded to its core.

  • @VictorLejarsa
    @VictorLejarsa 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    “We are not saying rent freeze is a bad ideia”, so you are wrong. They are a very stupid ideas

  • @carolewynn9407
    @carolewynn9407 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Need far more social housing, only available to British citizens.

    • @kremepye3613
      @kremepye3613 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Fourth generation british citizens

  • @judahfriedman8516
    @judahfriedman8516 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +100

    Rent Controls fail everywhere.

    • @jennythufu7676
      @jennythufu7676 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +12

      not in France though

    • @judahfriedman8516
      @judahfriedman8516 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      @@jennythufu7676 Except less properties and deteriorating units.

    • @usxnews1834
      @usxnews1834 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      no they don't, they work in several countries I've lived in or been to - landlords are leeches and housing shouldn't be treated like a commodity in a decent society, you're just repeating capitalist propaganda

    • @selk2000
      @selk2000 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Not in austria

    • @AhmedElmanzalawi
      @AhmedElmanzalawi 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      How many?

  • @deividasnavickas
    @deividasnavickas 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    We need cap on how many properties one can own. There are mtfkrs with +20 houses in their names

  • @DeeBlockEthan
    @DeeBlockEthan 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +40

    It’s a supply, not demand issue. Why don’t they losen building tax and regulations, and companies would make more profit when building housing units. If you are relying on politicians, you’re screwed. If 100k homes need to be built to ease housing inflation, why are they focusing on pricing caps? It’s very simple. More houses need to be built.

    • @maxcorbettblaikie
      @maxcorbettblaikie 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      I’m not saying it’s right or even the correct decision, but from a purely political perspective it’s far cheaper (cost basically nothing for the gov to do), easier, and quicker to introduce price caps than build 100k houses. A cheap, easy, and quick policy that might help, or more importantly gives the illusion of helping is like catnip for politicians

    • @tom.2900
      @tom.2900 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      Supply and demand are relative terms that are intrinsicly linked. If demand does not change, but supply increases, you have less relative demand to the supply.
      We are allowing more and more and more people into this country, with nowhere to live. We have very little green, publically accessible spaces left in the country (i.e. we live in a high density country), farming is already suffering and towns already ever expanding. Where are these houses going to be built?
      Immigration is the number one issues, whether folk want to admit it or not.

    • @outofideas42
      @outofideas42 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      You xannot rely on private companies to build enough houses to match demand, because that would necessarily bring down prices, whichbwpuld bring down profits. Homelessness is good for business.
      The number of council houses that have been sold through right to buy (roughly 2m) is in great excess pf those on the waiting list for council housing. What we need is council houses. The rents they bring in can enter the councils tax pool and act as a revenue stream as well aa provode affordable housing. Capitalism cannot cure its own problems

    • @wh880
      @wh880 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Absolutely.

    • @-tom-8720
      @-tom-8720 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Of course capitalism can solve its own problems commie. You do realise that new housing companies can be created right so even reduced house prices would be profitable. The fact that we have so few housing developers is due to excessive regulations not capitalism ​@outofideas42

  • @datageekkarting8372
    @datageekkarting8372 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Rent control has been tried in every country and has, without except led to deprivation. Have studied this, economist Assar Lindbeck pronounced: “Rent control appears to be the most efficient technique presently known to destroy a city…. Except for war”.

  • @cc3
    @cc3 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    when trying to rent in london last year it was a horrible experience, every viewing we went to resulted in a bidding war (sometimes in person at the viewing). on multiple occasions we sent our deposits only to later be told that someone else has offered more. it's a bloody nightmare - right now I'm renting in an unlicensed HMO and thankful that even though this rental is shit, at least i'm not getting messed about by letting agencies.

  • @savvagrachev2754
    @savvagrachev2754 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    It's been tried for years but I don't think people have understood that this easy easy solution rent controls, one vote and all our problems go away just doesn't work. It doesn't even take a genius to figure out why rent controls don't work either.

  • @cadebradbury9334
    @cadebradbury9334 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    Rent and housing should be part of inflation calculations

  • @Falney
    @Falney 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Depending on how it's done, it may remove a lot of of properties from the market. If the introduce a cap that is lower than mortgage payments, the owner won't want to continue renting it out.

  • @Owain_Lord_Of_Glyndyfrdwy
    @Owain_Lord_Of_Glyndyfrdwy 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +53

    I love how Alessandro Manzoni put it in The Betrothed 200 years ago: price control is like "an aging woman who thinks she can be young again by simply altering her birth certificate.”

    • @georgemangco2526
      @georgemangco2526 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Thankfully the aging woman now has access to the fertility drug "build-more-housing-as-detailed-in-Labour's-manifesto-axine", so we should all be sorted!

    • @Owain_Lord_Of_Glyndyfrdwy
      @Owain_Lord_Of_Glyndyfrdwy 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@georgemangco2526 YES. And it's not about being for or against the free market, it's all about addressing the underlying issue

    • @mattiascrowe2549
      @mattiascrowe2549 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@Owain_Lord_Of_Glyndyfrdwy there's a massive amount of housing sitting empty in london, because it works as an investment property because house prices are high, because rent is high, because housing is sparse, because a large amount of housing is sitting empty

    • @andrewallen9993
      @andrewallen9993 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@georgemangco2526 Dream on sunshine, dream on.

    • @SaintGerbilUK
      @SaintGerbilUK 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@georgemangco2526Canada announced similar, but they're failing to deliver.
      Labour may have announced millions of new homes but in doing so they've made it impossible to deliver, since the price of the goods required will skyrocket.

  • @ticktock79
    @ticktock79 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Rent controls do not work on a markwt with constrained supply, there are far too many immigrants for the rate of house building, we added more people in a year than an entire city worth of housing

  • @wh880
    @wh880 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    How to make the situation worse, rent controls!
    Ridiculous policy which has failed everywhere its been.

  • @zacharyhenderson2902
    @zacharyhenderson2902 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Whenever a state or country or municipality introduces a Cap on rent, almost every unit that's currently renting below the cap almost immediately or at the end of its current lease goes up to it. You also see a changing of issues, where instead of properties being available but being too expensive for most people to rent, which is a market issue that can change on its own, the problem then becomes every available unit was rented out as soon as the rent control went into effect, and there's no available units to stay.

  • @xtopia9758
    @xtopia9758 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +73

    Don’t introduce rent controls, introduce a Rent Tax. Tax the income that landlords gain on Rent Specifically. Ensure that the tax is high and progressive. This can kill two birds with one stone, as the government can gain a lot of money from this tax while landlords are disencentivised from raising rent.

    • @benjaminchooyin5280
      @benjaminchooyin5280 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      Yeah this is a much better idea than rent controls

    • @inshal6420
      @inshal6420 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +15

      The only tax we need is a land value tax.

    • @charles1117
      @charles1117 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +42

      I don't think this works, end result will be all landlords raising rent together to compensate the tax, and effectively government is just gaining money from tenants, not landlords

    • @matthewwyld3758
      @matthewwyld3758 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      I can see the costs of the taxes being passed on.

    • @mathyeuxsommet3119
      @mathyeuxsommet3119 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      ​Which is by the way different from an haberger Land Value Tax which cannot be passed on consumer.

  • @RafaelKrapf
    @RafaelKrapf 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Can you, please, suggest a news channel that recognises that rent control is a terrible idea?

  • @n00bma5ter69
    @n00bma5ter69 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    6:17 no surprise.
    I don’t believe rent control or landlord tax breaks would lower London rental prices in London. Housing supply increase is the only answer

  • @koalasquare2145
    @koalasquare2145 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    I wouldn't count on Starmer to do anything actually good

  • @MoonDweller1337
    @MoonDweller1337 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +24

    Just look at the Singapore model for social housing. If a tiny country of Singapore can do it, UK can do it too.

    • @chrisjie2127
      @chrisjie2127 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +24

      Doesn't fit with UK culture. In Singapore you don't have the silly right to live in a specific council area. You get told where to live basically. And they force the demographics of each housing block to be representative of the country to stop ghettos forming. As well as having ultra strict rules on noise and anything to do with social cohesion. And you never outright own the housing. It always goes back to the Government (which is how it should be).
      There's no way their system could be implemented in the UK, nor would the population in the UK accept it.

    • @WillmobilePlus
      @WillmobilePlus 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Singapore is known for being a quasi-dictatorship.

    • @tremarley9648
      @tremarley9648 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Well said. There are a lot of empty homes in the UK, but not in places where people generally want to live. Those would be the places the government would send people. High crime, low income or job opportunity places.

    • @electricpaper269
      @electricpaper269 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Singapore doesn’t have mass immigration pushing demand to insane levels.

    • @mrcaboosevg6089
      @mrcaboosevg6089 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Comparing small countries to big countries will never work. We're more in line with Japan or France than we are a literal city state

  • @nasirhussain4426
    @nasirhussain4426 หลายเดือนก่อน

    You can get anything below 2000 in London, this is actually insane as wages have been pretty stagnant and getting outpaced by the rental inflation, high rental yields are encouraging the property owners to gauge the prices and charge whatever they want

  • @aldine_KSP
    @aldine_KSP 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +26

    Promises to build more houses
    Introduces rent controls.
    Cant make this stuff up

    • @randomlygeneratedname7171
      @randomlygeneratedname7171 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      You missed a few steps. So for more profit, there must be more houses instead of just milking a few houses.

    • @aldine_KSP
      @aldine_KSP 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      @@randomlygeneratedname7171 what im saying is is that rent controls are a bandaid solution because it doesn’t address the shortage of housing. Rent controls make demand even worse.

    • @SaintGerbilUK
      @SaintGerbilUK 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@randomlygeneratedname7171we built about 250k houses last year, and we imported 700k, even if Labour somehow doubles that (which is nearly impossible) it's still not enough.
      That's also ignoring that the cost of products required for building would also skyrocket increasing the cost of the houses.

    • @randomlygeneratedname7171
      @randomlygeneratedname7171 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@aldine_KSP The rich out their money in the housing sector to grow and preserve their wealth as everyone will need shelter. So just stop them extorting people and force them to invest in building more

    • @randomlygeneratedname7171
      @randomlygeneratedname7171 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@SaintGerbilUK Well, get building then and ain’t women supposed to double and triple the population anyways because they stopped doing that.

  • @leehadfield1039
    @leehadfield1039 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I live in Spain. A similar plan (rent cap in stressed areas) was introduced here to relieve the housing crisis but it has not been successful and with the housing laws that changed at the beginning of 2023 giving tenants all the rights and owners none. We have a MASSIVE squatter problem (the 48 hour rule giving anyone the right to live in your property if after 48hrs the police have not been informed, it’s unbelievable what’s happening here) owners are scared to rent and consequently thousands of properties are wrapped in cotton wool apparently waiting for the laws to change before considering renting there properties out again. Be careful what you wish for.

  • @OperationAndrew.
    @OperationAndrew. 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    Rent controls sound nice on the surface.
    But the more you think about them, the worse the idea becomes.
    Freeze rents for existing tenants? Expect to see rents rise substantially for new tenants.
    Freeze rents altogether somehow? Expect landlords to sell, and then we have even less houses available for rent. Leading to an even greater rental crisis.

    • @jackwillis2963
      @jackwillis2963 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      If landlords sell, there will be more supply if housing in the market. Supply and demand means house prices will drop, making it easier for people who would rent to buy. Short term worse for renters but long term better

    • @OperationAndrew.
      @OperationAndrew. 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@jackwillis2963 it is true that house prices would become lower but not likely low enough for everyone to buy one. Bear in mind how unaffordable they are right now

    • @olamilekanakala7542
      @olamilekanakala7542 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      For someone to sell there must be a buyer, so why should we care that anyone sells. If you’re worrying about whether people build new housing, that is more a dysfunction of the financial system than rent control. And people would still build housing because it’d be a way to make money. Heck, most restaurants fail yet new ones pop up all the time. As long as there is money to be made, there’ll be people doing it.

    • @XMysticHerox
      @XMysticHerox 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Them selling does not suddenly delete the housing 🙄 I mean the actual solution it to decommodify it entirely.

  • @Will-vs5kp
    @Will-vs5kp 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Not once in history have price controls worked, and they never will.
    Homelessness about to skyrocket

  • @Dongobog-ps9tz
    @Dongobog-ps9tz 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    Introduce a levy on buy to let mortgages that raises the effective interest rate and lower interest rates on homes that are the persons primary dwelling. Buy to let is what has been driving prices up and it's parasitic.

    • @sparkymmilarky
      @sparkymmilarky 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      This is just wrong. Do you have any idea how much landlords have to pay out? There is no money in it so they are forced to raise rents massivley
      There is no way to lower costs unless we build more houses

    • @Dongobog-ps9tz
      @Dongobog-ps9tz 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@sparkymmilarky Yeah they raise the rents, so more people buy houses wanting to cash in on the high rents, its a vicious and self amplifying cycle. The homes will still exist if landlords are not buying them. You can make price invariant perturbations to the market by subsidising a desirable kind of buyer (primary residence) and penalising another (landlords). Buy to let is the only heavily leveraged investment where we don't consider people idiots who deserve whats coming to them when it fails.

    • @Bozebo
      @Bozebo 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@Dongobog-ps9tz Don't we? I do. But probably because that's what pays my bills xD

    • @Dongobog-ps9tz
      @Dongobog-ps9tz 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@Bozebo What do you mean?

  • @georgesos
    @georgesos 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    How can you police this?
    Only the council flats can be under such limit, private owners cant be stopped.
    Unless you want to have loads of empty flats around...

  • @olb3587
    @olb3587 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +52

    Ridiculous that Labour and Tories turned this into a "complicated" issue - the obvious solution is more council housing, but Labour were scared to change taxes in order to pay for it so we're only getting houses built for private renting.
    Local rent controls and changes to council tax may be helpful, but they can't solve the issue on their own.

    • @WillmobilePlus
      @WillmobilePlus 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

      "the obvious solution is more council housing"
      LOL! More government projects..Cripes you people are off your rocker.

    • @olb3587
      @olb3587 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +14

      @@WillmobilePlus tax funded infrastructure?! 😱
      It's a data-driven position: we need a lot more houses, ideally at affordable prices, and housing development has plummeted since we stopped building council houses.

    • @RushfanUK
      @RushfanUK 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@olb3587 Why do we need more houses?

    • @olb3587
      @olb3587 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      @@RushfanUK since the decrease in annual house building (lower supply), homelessness and rent prices have increased significantly, because demand for housing follows population.
      As a necessity, rather than a luxury, housing does not follow the rules of supply and demand in the same way as most commodities, because supply has almost no effect on demand. The only times that house building has kept up with population growth was during massive council housing projects.

    • @ShanaChippy
      @ShanaChippy 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Mate....delete this comment. You're clearly ignorant and have no idea wtf you're talking about or how it works. 😂😂😂

  • @matsal3211
    @matsal3211 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Gotta love the landlord bootlickers in the comment section.

    • @addictiontocars
      @addictiontocars หลายเดือนก่อน

      Sorry that reality doesn’t line up with your views.

  • @technomad9071
    @technomad9071 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +30

    🐂💩 maintenance is a LEGAL requirement and not upto landlords discretion

    • @AMGitsKriss
      @AMGitsKriss 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

      So is accepting people on housing benefit, but landlords still routinely turn such people away. Shit needs enforcing.

    • @Runboyrun89
      @Runboyrun89 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      That depends. The landlord can do the bare minimum instead of getting ahead of issues.

    • @revorocks123
      @revorocks123 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@AMGitsKriss Yeah cos they often trash the property. Why should a private landlord be forced to subsidise such behaviour? Council housing should be the sort of thing to provide to these people, not the private sector.

    • @adenkunz4747
      @adenkunz4747 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Poor people are the majority of criminals. Fact​@fraser-y9r

    • @Whitepawprint
      @Whitepawprint 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      ​@@revorocks123if they don't want the troubles of being a landlord I guess they can get a proper job then 🤷‍♂️

  • @lukerowland7836
    @lukerowland7836 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    £2,080 is a lot. In Toronto we have rent controls as well as constant new building high rises. Like most studio - 1 beds are between $2100(what I pay)- $2500.

  • @timgwallis
    @timgwallis 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

    I’m a Lefty but screw rent controls. We need to have universal tenant unions to negotiate rents, and require all rental properties larger than a single unit be owned by a domestic REIT, with REIT shares accumulated by the renters of the units. Single units can still be owned and rented out by individuals, but not companies or foreign owners.

    • @SaintGerbilUK
      @SaintGerbilUK 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      If you want the renters to own the REIT why not just have them buy the property?

    • @serebii666
      @serebii666 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      "Single units can still be owned and rented by individuals, but not companies or foreign owners." Say goodbye to university dorms then, or assisted-living facilities, or any possible economies of scale. Building maintenance and upgrades will also be fun, when everything needs to be decided by a quorum of incessant meetings. "or foreign owners." - now that's just plain xenophobia.

    • @Ritualsrevenge
      @Ritualsrevenge 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Classic lefty, living in a dreamworld

  • @DiscreetHobo
    @DiscreetHobo 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I live in Brighton. My landlord wants to lift my monthly rent from £750 to £920. As a student working part time, Its either work full time to afford my flat, and pretty much fail Uni, or focus full time on Uni and not have enough money for my flat
    I genuinely dont know what to do

  • @npcknuckles5887
    @npcknuckles5887 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

    4000 years of recorded history show that price controls lead to shortages. Argentina most recently ended its own price controls and saw a massive surge in supply of rental properties as a result. Rent control is a recipe for disaster.

    • @Bozebo
      @Bozebo 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Sure if you cherry pick history from already failed economies. Instead of say, Britain during the height of the empire.

    • @npcknuckles5887
      @npcknuckles5887 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@Bozebo No cherry picking. It's the same for every single instance of it.

  • @TwoNote
    @TwoNote 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    We had a rent freeze in NYC for rent stabilized buildings during covid, and the city survived just fine. Rent increase are normally capped for Rent Regulated buildings, and well landlords in return have their taxes waived or greatly diminished in those properties. (obviously, it is not perfect), and whenever a neighborhood is becoming gentrified, regulated buildings are bought by VCs who want to kick people out or make life so unbearable for tenants to leave (rent stabilized requires that the landlord offers you a new lease unless you did something egregious), and then look for loopholes to take the building out from being rent regulated. They also withhold empty apts to force scarcity, and ask for higher rent increases (City this year had to pass a law that fines landlords keeping units out of the market)

  • @georgecobbold2234
    @georgecobbold2234 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    Everywhere they have introduced policies like this i.e Scotland and California. It has had the opposite effect as intended. Hold your seat . Rents are about to get even more expensive if this happens

    • @Bozebo
      @Bozebo 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      So would that be the rent controls we've had a lot of in history or just the newer ones today you're talking about?

    • @georgecobbold2234
      @georgecobbold2234 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@Bozebo recent. Would be interesting to see or know the cases that you are alluding to

  • @MarkLKahnt
    @MarkLKahnt 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    In Ontario, Canada, we have had provincewide rent control for around half a century. It locked down all rents to essentially inflation, and that was the system for around roughly twenty plus years, when it got revised 1) when a site was not continuing under the same renter, the landlord could seek current market rates for the new tenant, although it would be then subject to rent control rates for the duration of that tenancy, and 2) anything new added to the rental stock from that point would be exempt from controls.
    That went for around twenty years until the government revised things again and rolled all rental stock built before a certain date into controls. That date was moved forward again more recently.
    --
    Ontario has developers building new flats at best designed to be held by investors looking to ride property price growth, rather than actual renting. That of course is useless in the actual rental market - eventually they will be renovated into studios or essentially hotels. Someday governments will understand that developers won’t build for the vast stretch of the rental market because it doesn’t give them maxed profits, and realise that the government will need to build its own for the affordable end of the market.

  • @SDDT24
    @SDDT24 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    Definition of fighting the symptoms not the cause as that’s all labour have done so far . The demand is high as people are living longer and immigrations is at sky high and uncontrollable levels meaning the demand is so high and bidding wars start

  • @RatchetSly
    @RatchetSly 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    It cannot disincentivize landlords from maintaining or improving properties, because they're already not doing either. I've three friends searching for units in different parts of the UK, and every property they view has at least one major issue despite asking for absurd rents. Black mold, front doors that cannot close or lock, significant roof leaks, water damage, dead appliances (one was told the appliances in the unit couldn't be changed out, and also that the fridge hadn't worked in two years)

  • @monikaszafranek5611
    @monikaszafranek5611 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +43

    How about we just get rid of Landlords? Worked for that game Cities: Skyline 2 😂

    • @michaelhutchinson2854
      @michaelhutchinson2854 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

      Yeah? You gonna buy the house I rent out to a tenant? It’s £750,000 ish you might have to stop eating avocados on toast for a while….

    • @tupo3855
      @tupo3855 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@michaelhutchinson2854 I agree its dumb, i prefer renting to buying and so do many others. But if being a landlord was outlawed the property wouldnt be worth 750k anymore.

    • @michaelhutchinson2854
      @michaelhutchinson2854 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      @@tupo3855 do you think it’s all the landlords fault prices are high??? Okay crazy…..

    • @apostleoftea8426
      @apostleoftea8426 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@michaelhutchinson2854 You say that like we can afford Avocados or bread???

    • @steve11211
      @steve11211 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      There are millions in rental properties that could not afford to buy.. The government would have to buy up those properties and what let them live their for free... That would cost Trillions, even Labour doesn't have a magic money tree that big..

  • @ErmisSouldatos
    @ErmisSouldatos 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Ineffective solution that just scores cheap political points

  • @stormyprawn
    @stormyprawn 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +25

    "Bad for landlords" Oh no! My heart goes out to them.

    • @WillmobilePlus
      @WillmobilePlus 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Well then enjoy the higher rents, and dont look for our hearts to go out to you.

    • @kiuk_kiks
      @kiuk_kiks 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      @@WillmobilePlus
      Where’s these considerate landlords you speak of???

    • @realxinruz4064
      @realxinruz4064 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      they have to make money to.

    • @OrangeNash
      @OrangeNash 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@realxinruz4064 Aren't people supposed to do productive work to make money?

    • @WillmobilePlus
      @WillmobilePlus 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@OrangeNash Yeah? They are providing you with rental units because you cant afford a real home.
      Certainly more than what you can do in that realm.
      You want to cop an attitude about them, then get a house or live on the street!

  • @clocksforsale8120
    @clocksforsale8120 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    With all the controversy Mr Beast is in right now, why use his image? 0:08

    • @_jpg
      @_jpg 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Wrong video 😅

  • @ingopaul67
    @ingopaul67 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

    It's supply and demand. The majority of population increase over the last 2 decades comes from immigration. Add to that councils and housing associations haven't built enough houses. Rent restrictions will only reduce available properties, as seen with over regulation from the previous govt.

    • @Superfoodcookie
      @Superfoodcookie 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Funny enough we don't have skilled workers, British workers are lazy with a beans and roast mentality. Why nhs filled with coloured.

  • @philipmilner9638
    @philipmilner9638 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I thought the SNP tried 'housin/rent controls' IN Edinurgh, and rents went up, another 'failed policy' by Labour's Sadiq Karn...

  • @InfaniteFalcon
    @InfaniteFalcon 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +16

    Bring on rent control. But then also make it so any property found to have no permanent resident is either; bought by the state for council housing, or sold at auction to another private owner that will use it. Done

    • @jmurray1110
      @jmurray1110 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      And here’s a suggestion
      Strict property minimums for letting properties no broken windows, leaky taps or shit electric if you want to make money from habitation you had better keep it habitable and address issues swiftly no leaving the heating dead gif 3 months

    • @npcknuckles5887
      @npcknuckles5887 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      That is grotesquely rights-violating and tyrannical.

    • @Runboyrun89
      @Runboyrun89 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@jmurray1110so what happens when the prices of boilers, showers, white goods, flooring etc outstrips say a 2% cap?

    • @Jay_Johnson
      @Jay_Johnson 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      @@npcknuckles5887 The owner has the choice to sell it or find a tenant. There is a housing *crisis*. I don't know how you can advocate for keeping houses empty.

    • @jmurray1110
      @jmurray1110 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@Runboyrun89 well you don’t need to have a second place if you can’t afford the bare minimum in terms of repairs maybe you should rent
      If your personal house had issues would you leave it months every time
      I’m not asking for a lot just the bare fucking minimum

  • @Pietzu10
    @Pietzu10 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Rent Control has never worked and never will. You build more houses so there is more competition.

  • @donaldkinsey5245
    @donaldkinsey5245 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Rent controls are a bad idea and have never worked anywhere. It doesn't solve the underlying problems that caused prices to rise. Competition doesn't end with a cap on rent prices. It ALWAYS takes other forms [long waits, less investment, fewer units available, slower repairs, etc]

  • @naruciakk
    @naruciakk 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Rent control has been scientifically proven to be ineffective in increasing the number of affordable dwellings. It only, sometimes, make the rent cheaper for the people already renting and that don't need to change for a larger apartment for example. And that might also lead to some huge inefficiencies, e.g. older people that used to have children, but children are already adult might stay in the apartment they've been renting, even if it's now quite big and could be used by new families, but they have a nice discount on the rent, so they will stay.
    If you have a housing shortage the only real solution is to increase supply, either by more incentives for private developers or by constructing more council flats.

  • @tomgraham6071
    @tomgraham6071 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +64

    For rent controls to be relevant, they need to be slashed, not merely capped so they can't go much higher. I can't see Labour being as bold as that. They have no ambition at all.

    • @theinternetofrandomthings7796
      @theinternetofrandomthings7796 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

      The issue with 'slashing' is that it has an outsized economic impact in the short term, and won't result in more properties being available to rent. A more soft landing with caps allows a more gradual transition, without trashing the housing market which unfortunately most western economies health is reliant upon.

    • @Eoin-B
      @Eoin-B 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      We got rent caps in Ireland in recent years. Still, loopholes were put in so now in city centres we all play musical chairs with our homes every couple of years because they can't raise rents for the current tenants, but they can do "home improvements", taking the building off the market for 6 months and then letting it to somebody else at market rates.
      If anything it's worse. Because you keep having to move.
      Almost all politicians own a rental property and half their voter base wants to keep house prices high, so we are fucked until more boomers die off leaving the younger population with only half a property each and still renting themselves.

    • @tomgraham6071
      @tomgraham6071 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@theinternetofrandomthings7796 I'm sure we'd manage any short-term pain, inconvenienced from this luxuriously comfortable position of choice, comfort and security renters have been in for as long as I can remember. If it means landlords selling up then good as that'd bring house prices down. If it means landlords 'not investing as much', then absolutely fine as they already don't invest, so that argument is a bit of a joke in my view. Labour aren't persuaded simply because they don't want to be.

    • @tomgraham6071
      @tomgraham6071 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      @@Eoin-B thanks for the heads up on loop holes. Block those too then. It can be done I'm sure.

    • @BanterRanterr
      @BanterRanterr 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      ​@@Eoin-BWhen I visited my friends in Dublin, they had quite nice flat, and the rent was capped. The landlord could put their rent up only once a year, and the increase had to match inflation. At least that's how they explained it to me. Long story short, their rent didn't consume 80% of what they were earning...

  • @Elslawoy
    @Elslawoy 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    First, when the government passes a law prohibiting an agency from taking deposits on a booking property before signing a contract. The thing is that agencies require a booking fee, but they charge it to many potential tenants, keeping them for longer than three days, sometimes two or three weeks, to finally say that the landlord has decided on someone else. But I might end up on the street.

  • @joshbrown2217
    @joshbrown2217 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    I love the idea that introducing a rent control will prevent landlords from investing in the property and doing maintenance on the property, like they do that in the first place.

  • @joaodejesus3762
    @joaodejesus3762 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    This is a tough one. The pros and cons are pretty 50/50.
    I live in a European city with rent controls. It took me 6 months to find a bad apartment and then 14 months to find a good apartment. But now i pay less in a capital city than my friend in a medium English town.
    On the other hand, ive paid absurd prices for extremely substandard places in England, where the maintenance and repairs were awful despite the landlord taking way more money.

  • @xander6522
    @xander6522 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +17

    6 weeks into this Labour government and I already want them out!

    • @821Drifter128
      @821Drifter128 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Based on what?

  • @vulcan5176
    @vulcan5176 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Massively increase stamp duty on purchasing second/third properties. Deregulate construction and planning to allow for taller, larger apartment blocks to be built. This will not be an immediate fix, but rather a 15-20yr plan.

  • @sparkymmilarky
    @sparkymmilarky 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

    Maybe we could stop importing 500k+ a year?
    Maybe actually build houses (preferably up north)?

    • @FletcherRZX
      @FletcherRZX 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Shhh don't talk about immigration 😉

    • @cliffsofmoher4220
      @cliffsofmoher4220 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Isn't that what brexit saposed to do stop them from coming but where it didn't stop

    • @FletcherRZX
      @FletcherRZX 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@cliffsofmoher4220 you're absolutely right, entirely the fault of our inept government going against the will of the people

    • @cliffsofmoher4220
      @cliffsofmoher4220 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @FletcherRZX with brexit you kicked out skilled farmers labour's and replaced them with international students

    • @FletcherRZX
      @FletcherRZX 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@cliffsofmoher4220 again you should be blaming the government whose job was to execute it properly

  • @p8700-z5q
    @p8700-z5q 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Rent controls would be a disaster. Because if you set a price cap, it will become unaffordable to rent out property. So the supply of rental properties will quickly shrink, and then renters will have fewer options, and will have to move out of the city. The correct solution, would be to build more affordable housing and apartments, which will bring down the average cost to buy and rent.

  • @hustlinmagic
    @hustlinmagic 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Its not small BTL investors that people have to worry about. It's the pension funds and banks that have been investing heavily the past few years.

  • @wanger07
    @wanger07 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Would they also cap interest rates, property tax increases, and insurance premium increases? It’s unrealistic to force one sector to shoulder the burden while other industries can increase costs.

  • @andrewharper1609
    @andrewharper1609 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    Quick answer is not in the private sector. It isn't legal. To explain, the governing law of our country is The UN Convention on Human Rights (governing law since 1976) contained within which is The right to property. It basically means The Government can't tell you what to charge your tenants in rent.
    The only place rent controls can be put in place legally are in the public sector and the Councillors have gotten greedy and won't want to.

  • @thomasdalton1508
    @thomasdalton1508 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Rent controls will just make the problem worse. The problem is a lack of house building. If you make it less profitable to build houses by reducing the revenue you can get from them, we'll get even less house building.
    The solution is simple. If the private sector isn't going to build enough houses, the public sector needs to do it. The government should just build thousands of new homes. They can either sell them or keep them as social housing. It really doesn't matter. They just need to build them and get people living in them.

  • @inshal6420
    @inshal6420 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +25

    Taxing land will solve all of these issues

    • @chrisjie2127
      @chrisjie2127 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      As will ending the right to be housed at taxpayer expense in London or any other expensive area. If you desperately need housing paid for by the taxpayer, why not put these people in the north of England. You could give these people more space at less cost to the taxpayer.

    • @TGWazoo1
      @TGWazoo1 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      Not for renters, whom the cost increase will be passed onto. And mom and pop landowners who rent out property will be forced to first evict current tenants then sell their properties to corporations who get tax breaks.

    • @fabianstoll
      @fabianstoll 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      How? Why should someone build more apartments because of a new tax?

    • @Sku11King77
      @Sku11King77 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Err, first of all, sounds like you're advocating to essentially deport the poor to the north, therefore distancing them from their better off family members who could offer support, creating a deeper class divide between the north and south, enforcing that London is for the rich, and just generally disrupting people's lives. That's a terrible idea.
      Second, I know from my disabled homeless friend I went to uni with that living in London on state benefits is essentially impossible due to the incredibly high rents that this video talks about. So if the people you're talking about can't possibly live here anyway then that's obviously not in any way related to the housing costs being so goddamn high. I think you've completely missed the point.

    • @inshal6420
      @inshal6420 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      @@fabianstoll If you start taxing land developers will be more efficient with how they use that space. They will try fitting in as many units as they can. If you’re taxing a skyscraper the same as a single family home no developer in their right mind will build a single family home

  • @grantbeerling4396
    @grantbeerling4396 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    This subject is complex concerning consequences. I said this a million times, but here we go: 1) For Rent Control (always starting with a backdated freeze) to work for tenants and expel landlords, it will take at least ten years as houses are an illiquid asset (unlike cash is the most liquid) to either (historical evidence for this) sold to sitting tenants and/or local authorities to be turned back into social housing (1920s after four years rent freeze and 2 + years of Rent controls, 1 million properties sold to sitting tenants). As landlords sell up, the value of the land that property sits upon falls, and a domino effect ensues due to falling yields for landlords (i.e. future gains from land price increases).
    2) This needs to be a national RC, as you'll only move the problem elsewhere (US and NY issues).
    3) In 1910, 90% of property was rented, and there was no social (it didn't exist in real terms). Owner occupiers were only for the remaining 10% who owned multiple properties, a form of feudalism.
    4) After RF and then RC post-1914, the government of the day was forced into provision. This started with the 1919 Housing Act for council homes, followed by a promise for slum clearances from the previous rentier landlords, who would ALWAYS do the minimum maintenance due to 'loss aversion'. Mass private building for owner occupiers for skilled working and middle classes as land fell as a proportion of total value to 3-15% (the other part being build cost inc materials and profit). Aided by the 1942 Beveridge Report linking housing with health (as we have seen recently, damp = mould = respiratory issues, even early death).
    5) So even an average income of one earner could buy a 2.5-bed semi on a 25-year mortgage with a 10% deposit; this included postmen and women. Then, the 1947 Housing Act restricted what was known as the uplift of land values when former poor agricultural land was built upon by 100% taxation (too much and frightened the horses), but this meant a win for new towns with the government paying little fo the land, as there was no future uplift (i.e. yield)
    6) In 1954 and 1956, major parts of the 47 Act were repealed, allowing for fewer forms of rent control, leading to slum landlord Peter Rackman. Still, housing was being built hand over fist, often of poor quality, by secretive 'free market' large private building companies.
    7) By the 1970s, the Private Rental Sector (PRS) had dropped from 90% in 1910 to 7% in the mid-70s. There were surpluses in certain areas, but more slums needed to be cleared. Nobody was crying out for more PRS, just more owner-occupiers and better-quality social housing.
    8) In 1970-73, credit deregulation (CCC Act) caused a bubble, but it was abandoned once the oil crisis started in 73, followed by Wilson's re-election.
    9) Housing was still affordable, but food, electricity, and petrol were expensive. However, children could independently afford a starter home in their early 20s.
    10) In 1979, the big change, the end of affordable housing
    We all know what happened next, but one point is worth highlighting. Rent Control was ended in 1988, and the market immediately inflated (aided by the financial deregulation of the Big Bang in 1986), but few landlords reentered. But in 1992, the ERM crisis flattened the housing market, and a buy-to-let mortgage was made legal to revive it. Then, those who benefited from cheap housing got greedy, but in their defence, the welfare state was slowly being chipped away. This led to what is now known as 'asset welfarism'; the issue is if you don't have an asset, you're screwed.
    So what has changed? Land values. Remember I said in the 1950s that they were 3-15% of the property's value? Well, now, because the land is a tradable commodity with a house built on top, and what is known as a financialised debt funds this (again due to future yields, i.e. price increases), it is now on average 70%! (Build being 30%).
    What type of rent control? Well, there is already an existing rent control; my flat is a do-it-yourself shared ownership property from the early 1990s; the half I pay rent on is controlled by never being allowed to go above RPI inflation (now CPI) and is ultimately governed by the central government. Its original value was based on 3% of the original purchase price. The beauty of this is that there is no need for rent inspectors. So now my rent has fallen far behind market rates. I pay a 50% share in rent at 40% of market value.
    Fun Fact: Currently, the PRS is roughly 21% of all properties. If we went back to 7%, that would release 4 million properties onto the market all over the country. No new builds are needed, and the last 1 million can be built over 4 years. A few people have a surplus property to rent, creating scarcity whilst doing sweet FA, the much-hated Rentier Class. It's not clever; it's exploiting people who make and do stuff, i.e. 'key workers'.
    All political will no more or less.
    This is a fundamental overview, leaving loads out; at a minimum, it's a 10 K-word essay for comparative analysis.
    A quick 800 words, for more information Housingresearch *(dot) solutions
    *(dot = .)
    .

  • @charles1117
    @charles1117 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    Personally I do not support regulation on rental market because it will often cause more harm than good. For example, if we introduce rent control and make it too unprofitable for landlords, landlords will simply stop renting to tenants and make them Airbnb, then tenants will suffer from housing shortage as a result.
    Instead of regulation, I think we can just simply follow supply and demand, and increase supply by making house building easier, or reduce demand by constructing more basic infrastructure in less popular areas.

    • @baswallet1760
      @baswallet1760 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      You can simply introduce a cap on how many properties one could own. Or even have the obligation to live in properties that become available on the market. But ok, in the Anglo-American world, any form or regulation to help society further is directly seen as communism.

    • @Jay_Johnson
      @Jay_Johnson 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      The problem with leaving it entirely to the market is it will never reach full housing just as the market will never reach full employment. The natural rate of unemployment in the job market and the natural rate of homelessness in the housing market presuppose there is an equilibrium position at rest where some people are unemployed and some people are homeless. This is the only way to extract profit or rent.

    • @hrishiv
      @hrishiv 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Placing increased taxes on more than one property would be viable - still being profitable but just discouraging one person from owning several properties all being rented out.

  • @nasirhussain4426
    @nasirhussain4426 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Scandinavian countries have rigorous rental control and even dictate the price of the properties. They don't let you buy unlimited amounts of buy-to-lets properties, which encourages people not to rely on rental income and do absolutely nothing and go out and work. This also helps keep the property prices in check so people who do nothing inherit obscene amounts of capital and refinance it over and over to buy more properties and increase the demand, thus skyrocketing the prices as it's happening here. Building more houses is just one part of the solution, as funds will sweep in and buy the blocks of flats, and the deserving people will left stranded as before. Having price controls and policies in place to discourage people to have numerous properties and rather work and contribute to the economy and while keeping the housing index low

  • @WW-ic5nk
    @WW-ic5nk 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    Introduce property tax of 5% per annum on second homes, which would also apply to landlords who own several properties through a company.
    I have an aunt who owns her own home and a second house of multiple occupancy purely to generate income. I have a number of friends with multiple houses, the biggest offenders renting out their 2nd home to pay off the mortgage on their 1st while keeping a 3rd home by the sea empty just so they can holiday in it! The fuckers! That's 5 dwellings between 2 people in that paragraph alone.
    BTL landlords target 8-9% yield from rentals so this tax wouldn't completely kill off profits and trigger a housing price crash, but makes BTL much less attractive and more likely to invest in the stock market, or anywhere else. This would affect overseas buyers, UK owners, businesses, property funds and hopefully MP's

    • @tremarley9648
      @tremarley9648 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Landlords would raise rents to cover the taxes. Much like how rents increased, when landlords were told they can’t use their mortgage payments as a tax expense

    • @kiuk_kiks
      @kiuk_kiks 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Beautifully typed. I always had the idea of property taxes on 2nd and more properties, and a very steep tax on vacant properties. Unfortunately, the plutocracy would NEVER allow this to be ratified.

    • @randomlygeneratedname7171
      @randomlygeneratedname7171 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@tremarley9648 mortage payments should be a tax expense for everyone. Clearly the bankers rule. 🤣

    • @kiuk_kiks
      @kiuk_kiks 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@tremarley9648
      It doesn’t work that way. The rising interest rates caused mortgage increases in mortgage payments which resulted in higher rents, but it’s not feasible to do the same thing with property taxes.
      Problem is with eligibility for mortgages for tenants is not possible so the landlords take credit for it. Lower housing prices can cause a recession. It’s more an issue with the whole economy rather than increased rents.

    • @Bozebo
      @Bozebo 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Yeah isn't exactly the point to get people to invest in something else that actually generates wealth instead of strangles it?
      I'm not sure why they don't just say that, but it's clearly the point no? The only reason so many other industries are under invested is because there's no point when you make insane money in property and the entire economy is geared to support making money through property above all else.

  • @DrMJT
    @DrMJT 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    RENT CONTROL could/would ONLY work in the UK when the UK does away with Flexible Rate Mortgages.
    The Loan is Only borrowed Once at the start. The rate at time of loan is the first payment and the 250th or 300th payment.
    If base rate goes up, mortgage payments remain the same.
    If when base rate goes down, the borrower pays a small fee of £200ish to 'Re-Finance' the loan at the Lower Rate!
    Almost ALL the rental units in the UK are Private Individuals who have a BTL - Buy to Let Mortgage.
    So Every time the Bank of England raises the Base Rate = the Monthly Payment the Landlords have to pay = INCREASES.
    A BTL Mortgage taken out before the Tory faux inflation base rate rises was say £1000pcm for a mortgage of £250,000.
    After 14 base rate rises, the amount the Landlord has to PAY each month went from £1000pcm to over $4000pcm.
    If the property is rented for £1200pcm, exactly how is a rent rate control maximum of say £1250pcm or £1300pcm...
    The Landlord now has to find £2700pcm per property (if all are the same mortgage amount).
    If a Landlord has say 10 properties with a pre BoE rate rise income of £200pcm x 10 = £2000 pcm income.
    Most landlords are older, the rental income is the only income. They are not living a cushy plush way of life.
    Say the Landlord is a 50something person with job and job skills that No Longer Exist.
    Retraining after age 50 is pointless as given the choice of a 23yo or a 53yo with same training, they will hire the 23yo.
    WHERE are the small holding Landlords who had a £2k a month income (before TAXES and FEES etc)...
    NOW has to find £270,000pcm to cover the rent on the 10 rental units??
    FYI the Increases in Prices in the UK is only slightly due to Keynes Supply and Demand Economics.
    Virtually ALL of the UK Price Increases are exclusively caused by Brexshitastrophe. When the former Supply Chain of a strawberry or Tomato is cut from plant in Netherlands or Spain today before 1700... are washed, packaged, on pallets, on trains or lorries to the UK to be on supermarket shelves the next morning anywhere in GB and Eire before 0600 ready to purchase.
    NOW, the NEW supply chains have fruit, veg, and everything else being shipped from the USA, Chile, Peru, Australia, China, Philippines, etc etc... LOOK at country of Origin on the labels. Shipping these products from other parts of the world to the UK by AIR FREIGHT causes the former free to enter and just the low shipping cost of a few 100kms Lorry/Train.
    USA will never do a trade agreement with UK because the USA trade TO the UK increased by 40% since Jan2020 and the UK trade to the states went down as we have nothing and we produce nothing for export but to two markets... UK and EU... but now just UK.
    Another thing NO ONE is mentioning... the disappearance of SUGAR from food and drinks since Jan 2020 and it's replacement with HFCS (High Fructose Corn Syrup). HFCS is made by using enzymes on corn production WASTE products to convert and invert to almost all Fructose. This HFCS is the opposite isomer to the fructose we get in Sugar, Natural Fruits and Veg.
    The human body require Sugar to via the KREB's Cycle deliver Energy to Every cell in body and to remove the cellular waste products from every cell in body.
    Fructose and especially the isomer (mirror image of the shape of the molecule) is EXTREMELY Sweet, is EXTREMELY Addictive, and because we did not evolve to process the isomer of Fructose in HFCS... Every gram of it consumed is converted by Liver to Adipose (FAT).
    The extra kgs of the past 4.5 years are NOT Stay at home covid weight, it is HFCS weight.
    If your can, tin, jar, bag etc does not say Sugar, the sweetener is HFCS. The only way to shed this FAT is Ketosis... STARVATION.
    Before the year 2030, the UK will have a population that is bigger than the biggest Yank. People 600+Kg will be the NORM.
    The Big Agriculture Industry will BLAME SUGAR when it is NOT Sugar it is HFCS (it has a dozen plus different names to confuse customers).
    I stopped counting in summer 2020 when I reached the 1000th Product in Supermarkets with HFCS.
    If you stop buying it in supermarket products... does not leave much to eat... Eating out or Take Aways/Deliveries = all use HFCS.
    We used to have a QUOTA of 0.25% of all sugars consumed could be HFCS to appease the Yanks. It is their corn product!
    We actually only used 0.15% and we used to Auction the 0.1% for 65 million people to other Eastern EU countries... Why is Cadbury and Quality Street made in Poland, Czechia etc now?? Because they are using HFCS instead of Sugar.
    The UK used to earn several times MORE than we paid in EU Membership administrative costs from the Auction of the 0.1% for 65 million HFCS.
    Oh the lies that were told.
    It was never an In Out referendum. It was an Out OUT referendum.
    Out was OUT.
    IN was a piece of paper with a percentage number for David Camerloony to go to the EU to wave and say the Great People of the UK have spoken and we have decided to REMAIN IN THE EU..... BUT.... ONLY IF the EU dismantles the four fundamental pillars of the EU.
    The EU would have said NO NO NO and NO.... so DCamerloony would have said: "We TRIED but the EU refused to give us what we voted to have... so we are therefore FORCED to Exit the EU".... "Forced to Leave because the EU have made it impossible to remain".
    He did not get his vote the way he had planned so he QUIT immediately! Because he could not manage an exit that was by the vote and not one that was 'forced upon him'... An exit without vilifying the EU... was not something he or anyone could do that would not cause us to have this CHIT SHOW we have to exist in until someone has the Ed Balls to say, we tried, it was not a good idea, it is time for an REUNION... with the EU.

    • @SaintGerbilUK
      @SaintGerbilUK 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Tldr but your premise is wrong so I assume your conclusion is, interest is not only paid at the start of the loan but on an ongoing basis, which is why we have variable rate mortgages.

  • @giolag5593
    @giolag5593 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    "A disincentive for landlords to invest in their properties" 😂😂😂 Most private landlords have been milking the same houses with little to minimum maintenance, let alone investment, for decades while the rents are skyrocketing😂😂

    • @Ritualsrevenge
      @Ritualsrevenge 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      So you're not allowed to make a profit on your own investments?

    • @glostergloster6945
      @glostergloster6945 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Hi, a landlord here. I have to say I have never understood landlords who dont maintain their properties. A serious damp problem or electrical issue is going to hit your capital FAR more than the outlay to maintain the properties on a regular basis. The landlords that do neglect their properties end up taking a massive hit either when they sell (if its in bad condition), or end up forking out much more to treat a critical issue (e.g. a mild damp problem caught early might cost a few hundred quid to fix, an ingrained damp/mould problem would cost many thousands if it gets into the walls and floors).

  • @joshuahillerup4290
    @joshuahillerup4290 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Limitations on annual increases for existing tenants combined with specific rules around under what circumstances someone can be evicted can go a long way to helping renters without some of the disadvantages of broad rent freezes.
    That said, there's other things that need to be done to address the housing crisis as well, such as letting property owners increase density

  • @petruciobr
    @petruciobr 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    "We're not saying rent freezes are a bad idea"
    Yeap, rent freezes are a horrible idea.
    Want to drive rent prices down long term, remove regulations for both building and renting.

  • @nonoun9619
    @nonoun9619 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Rent ceilings are terrible for the economy.