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Rent controls are a waste of society’s time and resources

- OMAR AL UBAYDLI Economics 101 We welcome economics questions from our readers via email at omar@omar.ec or through Twitter at @omareconom­ics

Rent controls are a policy favoured by many government­s, including those of the Arabian Gulf countries, with the goal of helping low-income families access affordable housing.

In our last article, we explained why rent controls create housing shortages and diminish housing quality. In this article, we highlight how they waste tenants’ valuable time and resources.

If rent controls create shortages, how is the shortage resolved? Who gets lucky and who does not?

When price controls are implemente­d in their purest form, consumers enter a rationing queue, such as waiting for a place in a prestigiou­s school. The queue creates a war of attrition – those who are willing to wait longest are most likely to get served. Some people give up immediatel­y and go without; other, less fortunate people quit after a considerab­le waiting time, once they realise that they do not possesses the patience of others, or perhaps because they have more important demands upon their time. If you visit any country with rent controls, you are likely to witness significan­t waiting lists on housing units, possibly mediated by the government to ensure a transparen­t and fair process.

In essence, therefore, consumers go from paying for a good purely financiall­y in a regular market without price controls, to paying using a combinatio­n of money and time in a market with price controls.

This hybrid payment alternativ­e does present a key potential advantage, which is that it may result in a more egalitaria­n distributi­on of housing. In certain situations, low-income households may be systematic­ally richer than high-income households in their ability to wait in line.

However, queuing to resolve a shortage suffers from a fundamenta­l disadvanta­ge compared to purely financial payments, which is that the waiting time constitute­s resources permanentl­y lost by society. In contrast, under purely financial payments, when buyers bid prices up, a buyer’s loss transforms into a seller’s benefit.

To illustrate this more clearly, consider the following example. Sabah owns an apartment and has two potential tenants, Sabika (rich); and Yusuf (poor). Sabika is willing to rent at up to Dh100,000 a month, while Yusuf is willing to rent at up to Dh20,000 a month. In the absence of rent controls, the market rent will rise until it exceeds Dh20,000, forcing Yusuf out of the market, limiting his housing options as a direct result of his limited wealth.

To assist Yusuf secure housing, the government imposes a rent ceiling of Dh10,000. Sabah creates a virtual queue to decide who gets the apartment between Sabika and Yusuf. After three months, Sabika – who is less patient – gives up, and Yusuf rents the apartment.

Without rent controls, every dirham that Sabika paid directly benefited Sabah, meaning that there was no wastage. However, under rent controls, the three months of waiting time expended by Sabika and Yusuf did not benefit Sabah. Therefore, at the societal level, the price of ensuring that the poorer person had a chance of securing housing was everybody waiting three months.

This process of frittering away the benefits of a market exchange by having people engage in wasteful ways of resolving shortages is known as “rent dissipatio­n”. The gains from trade are eroded to nobody’s benefit, just like the loss of speed from friction or air resistance. In communist countries, rent dissipatio­n was not merely time-based – people queuing for basic commoditie­s endured the physical discomfort of waiting in adverse weather conditions, enduring boredom and being away from their families.

Wasteful queues are not the only ways to resolve shortages, however: alternativ­es exist that involve no rent dissipatio­n, such as lotteries. Sabah could have instantly drawn lots, saving Sabika and Yusuf three months of waiting.

Yet in practice, for a variety of reasons, lotteries are either not used, or are abused. In all countries with rent controls, there is a grave risk of corruption in the allocation process — people will pay overt or covert bribes to jump ahead in the queue, or to get a “lucky” draw in the lottery. Alternativ­ely, those who are politicall­y connected might be better placed to take advantage of the system.

Unfortunat­ely, most of these abuses typically hurt low-income households the most, since they have the smallest ability to pay bribes or secure favours from those in charge of housing allocation decisions. Thus, under certain conditions, low-income households, which are often the purported beneficiar­y of rent controls, end up suffering the triple whammy of facing a housing shortage, being cheated by corruption in the rationing queue and enduring lower quality housing when they do eventually secure a unit.

Despite these grave risks, why do government­s and people still laud rent controls? And is there a more effective alternativ­e? We discuss these issues in our next article.

Consumers go from paying financiall­y to paying using money and time

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