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[Alex] Rent controls are popular
with renters all over the world
because they appear to offer lower prices
with few adverse consequences.
In the long run, however,
extensive rent controls
can cause entire cities to crumble.
You can see that today
in Mumbai, India.
All of the predicted
consequences of rent control
can be seen in Mumbai.
There is a shortage of rental housing.
Very, very little new rental housing
is being constructed,
and the stock of old rental housing
is crumbling and falling apart.
At rents of 500 to 600 rupees a month,
maybe $10 a month,
the landlords can't even afford
to pay the taxes,
let alone pay the maintenance
and the upkeep.
Rent controls began in Mumbai in 1949
when rents were frozen at 1940 levels.
And, amazingly, rents
have barely increased since that time
despite tremendous inflation
and increased urbanization.
To learn more,
I spoke with Vaidehi Tandel,
Reuben Abraham and Kshitij Batra
from the IDFC Institute --
a think tank in Mumbai
that works on issues
of urban infrastructure.
[Alex] They froze rents at 1940 levels?
[Kshitij] They did.
We hear of these stories
where families are paying
a few hundred rupees a month
for a flat that would otherwise
cost maybe a lakh of rupees a month.
You're going to have
to tell us what a lakh is.
I'm sorry. So that would
be about 100,000 rupees.
Wow! So, they're paying
100 or 200, 300 rupees a month
for something which is worth 100,000?
Yeah. In this case, you have
actually a lot of families
that are perfectly well-to-do.
But they've just been grandfathered
into these rent-controlled flats
and they've been living
there for that time.
These are massive properties.
Some of these are massive,
massive apartments.
In India, tenant rights
are very, very strong,
and the court system is very, very slow.
The owner of this building --
which has long been
under rent control --
has long tried to evict the tenants.
In fact, the owner of this building
has been involved in a lawsuit
that was started
by his grandfather 50 years ago.
There's a remarkable sign
from the owners.
Take a look.
"Portions of the said building
are in ruinous condition,
likely to fall,
and dangerous to any person
occupying or passing by the same."
It's falling apart.
It's beginning to crumble.
Now, in part, that's a threat
to try and get the tenants to leave.
But it's an all-too-believable threat.
[News presenter] Another
deadly building collapsed in India.
A five-story apartment building
fell in Mumbai early Friday morning
while people were fast asleep.
It's unknown exactly how many people
are still underneath the rubble.
Rescuers have been digging
for survivors all day long.
[Vaidehi] There's really no incentives
for them to maintain the existing stock
and you see really bad deterioration
of the buildings
that are under rent controls.
So, the government then had to go
and create an assessed buildings policy
which sort of looks after these buildings
and pays for their maintenance.
Assess as a special tax?
Yes, for repairing and maintaining
these very, very dilapidated
and at-risk rent control buildings.
So, does the government
actually use the proceeds of the tax
to fix the buildings?
I'm not sure, actually.
[Alex] There's another problem
with rent controls in Mumbai.
Rent controls encourage landlords
to leave their properties vacant
rather than renting them out
and risking the possibility
of having a tenant that they can't evict
for the next half-century.
It's no surprise that 15%
of the housing stock
in Mumbai lies vacant.
[Kshitij] I think the census in 2011 --
that's a government survey --
found that around 11 million properties
were lying vacant across urban India,
which is a huge number,
given that they themselves estimated
that the housing shortfall is 18 million.
[Alex] It's clear
that abolishing rent controls
would solve many of these problems.
But are there other ways
to get more affordable housing
on the market?
Can the government build
more homes for the poor?
[Reuben] I've been working
on this particular issue
for at least nine years now,
and I have moved from calling it
"affordable housing" to calling it
"making housing affordable."
Any housing that comes
into the market will be captured
by the rich or whoever
have the means to capture it.
So, therefore, I would argue
that the real focus now
should be on just increasing
the supply of housing.
Because if you don't increase
the supply of housing,
the rich will just keep capturing it.
So, you will see numerous instances
just in Mumbai itself
of you look at an urban plan,
and you see these plans
for affordable housing,
where four 1-bedroom apartments
have effectively become
one 4-bedroom apartment.
So, you've literally grabbed from the poor
and made hot condos for the rich.
Anytime you have two prices
on the market,
the low price will sell to the high price,
or there will be some market operator
that will find a way
to grab the lower price
because there's a higher price
that's actually available on the market.
In effect, the slums look like poverty,
when in fact it's actually
a real estate problem
because the cost of housing
is just exorbitant
at the sort of income levels
that you have in a city like Mumbai.
So, the slums are really
the only free market housing.
That's right, free-market housing
and funnily enough,
also the only form
of rental housing that's available.
Once you put in place a policy like that,
you do not have
an organized opposition to it.
If you try to increase those rents,
you'd have politically a backlash.
So, people would say
rent's already so high in Mumbai,
why would you allow
increase in rent controls?
It's a policy that affects
not just people who are living here
but people who can't live here.
People who don't live here
but who want to move here.
Right, right.
So, they don't have
a political base from which to act.
Absolutely. That's absolutely right.
Wow.
[Alex] Rent controls
are not the only problem.
The approval process
to build new housing in Mumbai is lengthy.
In part, because builders
are subject to numerous requirements,
not just to do with safety issues
but also on building heights,
room sizes, and even parking requirements
for apartments built for people
who typically don't own cars.
The single biggest problem
would be approvals.
The approval process --
it's longer here than in Europe
or the United States?
Far longer. Today,
cost of capital in India
is close to 15% if not more.
At 15%, if my approvals process
takes 24 months,
don't be surprised that I will
only be able to build condos.
I will not be able to build
anything cheaper than that
because it's just pure mathematics.
That's just how it works.
As long as the cost of capital
remains that high
and the approvals process is this long,
you will end up with condos.
Companies that began
with the explicit aim
of building affordable housing --
raised a humungous amount
of private equity planning to build
700,000 rupee homes --
are today building 5 million rupee homes
because that's what the entire process
of approvals does to them.
That's the effective consequence
of all these regulations
which were really put in place
in a well-meaning fashion,
but have obviously --
you know the old line
about the path to hell
being paved with good intentions.
This is a great example of that.
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