Rent control is one of the few policies on which economists across the political spectrum largely agree, and they agree it doesn’t work the way its supporters claim. A 2012 IGM Forum survey of leading economists found roughly 80% disagreed with the proposition that rent control had a positive impact on housing affordability. That consensus has only hardened as more empirical work has come in.
Activists frame rent control as a moral question โ tenants versus landlords โ but the policy mostly redistributes housing among renters rather than shifting power between classes. The losers are the renters who don’t already have a controlled unit.
What the data actually shows
The most rigorous recent study, by Diamond, McQuade, and Qian at Stanford, examined San Francisco’s 1994 expansion of rent control. Tenants in newly covered units stayed about 20% longer, exactly as expected. But landlords responded by removing units from the rental market โ converting to condos, demolishing, or shifting to short-term rentals โ at a rate that reduced the rental housing supply by 15% in covered buildings. Citywide rents rose by an estimated 5% as a direct result.
That’s the pattern across decades of research from Cambridge, Stockholm, Berlin, and New York. Rent control protects current tenants in covered units while shrinking supply, raising market rents on uncovered units, and reducing maintenance investment. The benefits are concentrated and visible; the costs are diffuse and easy to miss.
Why activists keep winning the argument anyway
Rent control polls well because the alternative โ letting rents rise to market clearing โ feels like surrender. Telling a family facing a $400 rent hike that the long-run answer is more building permits is cold comfort, even when it’s correct. Activists offer something immediate: a cap, a freeze, a tenant board. Politicians like the optics, and the constituency for tomorrow’s renters doesn’t vote yet.
The honest position is that rent control addresses a real pain point with the wrong tool. The pain โ sudden, large rent increases for stable tenants โ is genuine. But targeted policies like just-cause eviction, longer notice periods, and direct rental assistance address that pain without choking supply. They’re less politically satisfying because they don’t punish a villain.
What actually lowers rents
The boring answer is supply. Cities that have built aggressively โ Minneapolis, Austin, parts of Tokyo โ have seen rent growth slow or reverse, often dramatically. Cities that have layered rent control on top of restrictive zoning, like San Francisco and New York, have not. The mechanism isn’t ideological; it’s arithmetic. When the number of units grows faster than the number of households, prices soften.
Zoning reform, by-right approval, parking minimum elimination, and accessory dwelling units don’t fit on a protest sign. They also don’t make for satisfying villains. But they’re the tools that have actually moved rents in the cities that have tried them seriously.
The bottom line
Rent control feels like justice and functions like a freeze on the housing market’s ability to respond. The evidence on this is unusually clear. If the goal is affordable housing for the next generation of renters, the answer is more housing โ not tighter rules on the housing that already exists.
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