Soaring rents may expose flaws in longtime economic theory: Don Pittis - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 12:23 PM | Calgary | -10.5°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
BusinessAnalysis

Soaring rents may expose flaws in longtime economic theory: Don Pittis

The end of rent controls in Toronto in 1991 was supposed to unleash a market-driven building boom in rental accommodation. Was the economic theory wrong?

Economic theory tells us rising rents should stimulate construction of new units. Where are they?

A for rent sign.
Rents in Toronto have soared leading to a growing dispute over whether rent controls are needed or if they will stop the construction of new rental properties. (David Donnelly/CBC)

From the vantage point of Winnipeg, Wayne Simpson has seen two sides of the Canadian property market.

"My daughter was in Vancouver with a good job and fled to Calgary she does her job, in Vancouver, out of Calgary," says the University of Manitoba economics professor.

Simpson's personal experience is quite different. He lives in Winnipeg, a city subject to aprovincewide rent control system that officially limits increases to between one and threeper cent.

Economic error?

In Toronto, reports of landlords suddenly demanding huge rent increaseshave reneweddemands to expand rent controlthere. But the economic questions theincreases raise affect people across country.

According to the theory of market rents, those staggering rent rises weren't supposed to happen. Ontario's former Conservative premier Mike Harris specifically changed the rules to end rent controlon housing constructed after 1991 for the very purpose of lettingmarket forces restrain rent increases.

So what went wrong? Is the economic theory false?

This house in Toronto's east end was listed yesterday at $629,000 but a bidding war could push the sale price higher in a city where prices are up a third in a year. (CBC)

This week, an economist at one of the big banks, Benjamin Tal from CIBC, released a report restating what is treated as a given by many marketeconomists that rent controls create a rental property shortage.

The corollaryof that argument is what advocates call a "free enterprise" system, where landlords can charge rents as high as the market can bear. In that case, says theargument,market signals will convince landlords to build more rental units, filling the gap in demand, and holding rents down.

The problem is that data from hot markets around the world shows that taking the lid offrentsleadsto a flood ofincome to speculators who have invested in rental properties, but shows little sign of keeping rents affordable.

Marc Vachon, chair of the geography department at the University of Winnipeg, who currently studies the impact of micro condominiums on Canadian life, lives in a rent-controlled buildingand recently fought an attempt to increase his rent by nine per cent. After appealing to the regulator, the increase was rolled back to 2.5 per cent.

"That's always been the argument, that rent control stops the developmentof new rental units," says Vachon. "This is not so true for Winnipeg."

The city has seen a glut of condo construction, and a downtown hotel recently converted itself to rental units.

Simpson alsopointsto a building boom in the city that has continued despite the rent control system.

Rent control light

One reason may be that while long-term tenants have rentincreases held to inflation, once they move on, landlords can do major renovations, allowing them to charge rates much closer to current market rates.

Also, says Simpson, building rental accommodation remains a good investment. Newly built properties provide a good safe stream of future income. Rents are set at the current rates when they are builtand risewith inflation. The loss of any future windfall shouldprices suddenly rise is seen as a reasonable trade-off. (See details and exceptions for the actual Winnipeg system here.)

Evidence from the U.S. shows that in the past, moderate rent controls haven't had a strong effect on the construction of rental properties.

"Simply building more units to bring down overall prices might work in some settings," saida 2015 report in Pacific Standard, "But in tight housing markets that are already heavily developed, as most major Northeastern or West Coast cities are, it's unclear whether rents are primarily driven by supply."

A 1,100-square-foot, two-bedroom open concept condo in rents for about $1,500 in Winnipeg that has rent controls and a building boom. (Kijiji)

As with other free market truisms, such as the idea that raising minimum wage causes unemployment, a simple economic analysis doesn't always work in the complex real world.

The same sort of simple economic argument says high rents and high property prices drive away the bright young people that make a modern economy thrive. Tell that to Hong Kong,Tokyo, London and New York.

Vancouver places 39thon the recent Economist list of expensive cities. Toronto comes in at a bargain basement 86th.

"Toronto and other big cities ... have advantages that don't go away just because it gets more and more expensive," says Simpson, whostill tries to entice faculty and students with Winnipeg's lower cost of living.

Solving the wrong problem

There is another possiblereason why freeing market rents does not lead to sufficient building. It may be thatrentcontrols never were the real cause of the housing shortage, says University of Calgary economist Trevor Tombe.

"Real estate is one of those really complex markets where there's all sorts of overlapping policies and overlapping jurisdictions," he says. Zoning or transportationissues can mean new rental properties don't get built in the areas where demand is strongest, bidding up the most desirable properties.

Others have said that foreign investors or empty properties being held, unrented, for speculation are important causes.

Even if evidence from elsewhere shows that moderate rent controls pegged near to inflation don't destroy the rental market, Tombe'sobservation isone more reason why regulators must look beyond rent controls to solve property shortages.

Of course, it may be that inToronto's Wild West property market, the economic theory on free market rent has been right all along. It's just that we'll only realize it once the propertybubble finallybursts.

Follow Don on Twitter @don_pittis

More analysis by Don Pittis