¿Por qué los alquileres son cada vez más caros?



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27 opiniones en “¿Por qué los alquileres son cada vez más caros?”

  1. I disagree with the idea that increased rent is because of rural exodus to urban areas. Except to say that some people are trying to escape the extreme expense in hometowns. I grew up in a small town in Eastern Oregon (< 20k people). The price to rent there is WAY higher then most major urban area nearby. I.e. Portland, Seattle, Boise, Las Vegas, etc…

  2. I don’t get in England why many new developments are housing estates with 4 or 5 bed houses. I hear the work from home arguments but surely most single people or couples don’t need these huge houses and there aren’t many families this large. A lot of them are detached too. Clearly, they’re building to demand, but it’s difficult not to question the sustainability of such choices. It’s like with cars and waistlines, which also grow ever larger…

  3. I'm highly disappointed to the overgeneralization and all out dismissal of documented facts to make way in favour of speculative pseudo analysis. Do you seriously think a country like Canada would have gotten tough on foreign investing on real state if everything was as simple as blame farmers and divorces people for high housing prices? Speculative investment, property hoarding and purposely vacant houses are a real subject study and are the basis of hundreds of serious reports that employ thousands of specialists over decades and have pretty much concluded on the above to be the main causes for housing crisis in general. This video takes few graphs and mainly from the us and then makes wacky paring between the US and Europe markets with no regards to very heavy differences in regulation and financing of housing protects. Really sad such a lazy video came out of an otherwise very informative and generally informed channel. I hope they get a chance to do some independent review of the topic and stop relying so much on their Spanish editorial. Clearly there is a marked ideological bias in that office.

  4. Yes, but also net migration, developed countries attract more migrants then leave, and where do migrants often start off? in the cities, need to build more around cities is obvious soloution

  5. But as the baby boomers die off, your going to have more and more large houses on the market for people that aren't having families and don't need all the space.
    I'd like to have my own apartment again but moving back in with dad and paying him 750/month is just cheaper and better for savings and paying off my debts. Down to just one credit card now.
    So many people in my age group have written off owning a home, some have slept in cars or gotten multiple roomies (not on the lease), to cover the costs. But that not viable long term.

  6. I'll give a few reasons why I believe rents are increasing so. 1. AirB&B, etc When a house is AirB&B'ed, that house is taken off the rental market, and local renters must compete today with hotels for space. 2. Corporate investors For example, I know in there is one Canadian company (from Vancouver) that owns over thirty thousand houses in Florida. When this happens, supply and demand get out of balance. In addition, REITS While they began in the 1960s in the US, they took off in the 1990s, and literally rocketed thereafter. Companies as Blackstone taking over personal housing is a relatively recent development. 3. Everyone today is getting into the rental business Whereas thirty years ago, few individuals owned units and rented them out, due to the Internet now everyone has access to this knowledge. I have more than a few friends who own houses as a side hustle.

  7. It very much boils down to supply and demand. Landlords will always charge as much as they can get. Tenants will always pay as little as possible. As currently, urban living space is in high demand, owners of such properties can squeeze their tenants at will.
    E.g. in Berlin, the big corporations, which bought previously publicly owned blocks of flats, are currently making above 40¢ after corporate taxes in profit on every €. This is a profit margin, most businesses can only dream of (unless it's Apple and fanboys will pay any price to get their beloved logo).
    The withdrawal of the state from the letting and construction markets has removed a big stabilizing factor from the overall real estate market. With the commodification of the basic human need to live, we have entered the typical cycle of boom and bust which characterizes free market economies.

  8. Lifestyles of renters has changed. 1970-mom dad 2 kids one home.
    2023- mom dad 2 kids two homes.
    I was a weekend dad paying for a 2 bedroom apartment that my daughter was in 4 days a month
    My ex also had a 2 bedroom apartment. That could be a reason for higher demand.

  9. Quite good explanation, dismissed a few of my assumptions on the matter.
    It would be useful to know how much land price influences real estate prices. Also what about commercial real estate, how much does it contribute to increase in land prices. In the end they use up the same land.

  10. you are MISSING the biggest reason why rent is so high. everything you had mentioned only have a very effect on rent price. the BIGGEST reason is the high value of the properties. follow by higher cost of renting out( include maintance, bad tenants, eviction,)
    my early rental properties cost around 80-100k and i rent them out for 700, after covid the cheapest properties i could find is 200-250k, this will force me to rent them out for 1500-2000. this has nothing to do with aging single renter, or whatever you mentioned, its simple cost the landlord 2x-3x more for the properties, so they will leases them for 2x-3x the rent. as simple as that.

  11. They stopped building council houses en mass in the late 90s and the current help to buy scheme in recent years. That's what it did here in Ireland. And rural rental prices have gone up at the same rate as cities here. We had it relatively good between 2010 and 2016, but it's been crazy again since.

  12. In the 90’s inflation expressed itself in tech stock prices in the 00’s real estate especially homes. Now it shows in rental prices as rental units locked in low interest purchase loans are traded for investors looking to dodge investments That make no sense when the inflation comes general. Government caused inflation often pops up in one area then spreads out into others.

  13. Its basic law of supple and demand really. Everyone wants to live in a house near your work. No one wants to live in houses away from the city no matter how cheap the rent may be there.

  14. This is what I describe as, "Cities are a form of induced demand." The bigger the city the more it concentrates opportunities and other desirable elements (leisure, public facilities and transportation etc.), the more it attracts people, which in turn attracts more businesses etc. However, while houses can be built endlessly, desirable locations are comparatively a limited resource (you can only build so many houses near the best schools, the best paying companies etc.). So the price in those areas keeps being pushed up.

    The only ways around this issue is to spread good stuff around (and not say, concentrate everything into only a single big capital city like London or Paris), or to reduce demand (by limiting immigration like Japan while also suffering declining birth rates), or to make the city become 'not desirable' anymore, thus chasing all the demand away.

  15. “16 million homes vacant across the US”

    known illegal immigrants filtering across the US @200k+ per month, and the housing permits have been lower than just illegal immigration, never mind refugees & legal immigrants & birth rates

    What is the immigration & migrant patterns, in other countries? (I bet it is similar)

    The number of people per Home is likely dropping, as the video mentioned, due to broken homes & smaller family sizes & young people moving out & elderly living independently.

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