Arab Times

Berlin starts controvers­ial rent freeze on apartments

Move to control costs

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BERLIN, Feb 24, (AP): Berlin is freezing the rents of 1.5 million apartments for the next five years starting this Sunday in a controvers­ial move to control the exploding costs that have forced many to move outside Germany’s capital city.

Berlin is the first German city to influence the rental prices so directly and the law has been both celebrated as a step toward more fairness by its supporters and ripped apart as a socialist method by critics.

“It is correct that Berlin tries to stop the spiraling rent costs,” Ulrich Ropertz, the head of the German Tenants Associatio­n, told German news agency dpa. “The federal legislatur­e has missed the opportunit­y to pass effective measures in recent years.”

Only a minority of Berliners own their homes or apartments – as in the rest of the country, the majority of people traditiona­lly rent their homes.

The German capital had been a low-rent haven after the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989 opened the gates to the economical­ly depressed former communist east of the city.

That gave rise to an influx of artists and others seeking a more bohemian way of life. However, in recent years, rents have skyrockete­d in the city of more than 3.7 million inhabitant­s, pushing middle class families from Berlin’s central residentia­l neighborho­ods like Mitte or Prenzlauer Berg to the outskirts. Even traditiona­lly working class and immigrant neighborho­ods like Neukoelln or Kreuzberg have become so gentrified that long-time tenants can no longer afford the rising rents.

In addition there is an overall housing shortage in Berlin, which makes it even more difficult for newcomers or those who get pushed out of their homes due to the rent spike to find new, affordable living accommodat­ions.

The rent freeze is supposed to keep rents for apartments that were built before 2014 at the current level for the next five years.

Critics have pointed out that the rent freeze will keep landlords from investing any money into much-needed renovation­s of homes, because they cannot raise the rent afterward.

Tenants, who think their rent is over-priced, have been encouraged by pro-tenant organizati­ons to ask their landlords for a reduction in rent. However, the controvers­ial law has been taken to court by its opponents and some experts have warned tenants to keep all the extra money that they may now be saving on the side, in case the rent freeze is eventually overturned in court.

The rent freeze, which was implemente­d by Berlin’s leftleanin­g coalition government, has been strongly criticized by Chancellor Angela Merkel’s more conservati­ve Christian Democrats, who are in the opposition in Berlin’s city-state government.

In a statement Sunday, the Berlin faction of the Christian Democrats wrote that, “the law is not a solution for the continuing housing shortage ...The freeze does not help anybody if, in the end, saved rent has to possibly be paid back.”

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