Posts with tag: London mayor

Sadiq Khan to Push Rent Controls as Part of Re-Election Campaign

Published On: March 4, 2020 at 10:44 am

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Categories: Landlord News

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The mayor of London, Sadiq Khan, has placed rent controls at the heart of his re-election campaign, calling the upcoming mayoral election “a referendum on rent controls”. 

Mr Khan is demonstrating that he is on the side of London tenants, who spend an average of 43% of their income on rent and saw rents increase by a third in the ten years since 2010.

He has issued a challenge to the Prime Minister, who had previously ignored Khan’s plans for rent control in the capital, stating:

“The case for rent controls is now absolutely undeniable. But Tory ministers have blocked us from introducing our plans for rent controls in London and have simply said no.

“That’s why today I am making the mayoral election on 7 May a referendum on rent controls – showing Londoners that I will stand up for renters. The prime minister will have to give us the powers we need because if he refuses to do so he will be denying the express democratic will of millions of Londoners. And as we have all heard Boris Johnson repeatedly say himself, the democratic will of the people must be respected and it is not for politicians to frustrate it.”

The Residential Landlords Association (RLA) and National Landlords Association (NLA) have taken the stance that rent controls would harm tenants rather than help them. John Stewart, policy manager for the RLA, and Chris Norris, policy director for the NLA said: 

“Rent controls might appear attractive to those already renting but they would be a disaster for anyone looking for somewhere to rent. 

“All they would achieve, as history and experience elsewhere tells us, is to drive landlords out of the market exacerbating an already serious shortage of homes available. 

“Instead of putting out simplistic and superficially appealing proposals in attempt to win votes, the Mayor should focus on boosting the supply of available housing using the powers he already has. 

“Only then will he make any discernible impact on improving the affordability of housing across the capital.”

But there are many who believe that this argument doesn’t hold weight, pointing to major cities such as Berlin and New York City where tighter rent controls have been shown to be effective. 

The free market dictates that where there is demand, there will always be an enterprising business or individual willing to supply. In effect, rent controls could simply drive out landlords whose business models are unable to adapt, strengthening the market overall.

Caitlin Wilkinson, a policy manager at the campaign group Generation Rent, said: 

“London is one of the most expensive cities to be a renter on the planet. Soaring rents mean the basic necessity of a secure, safe home is out of reach for too many people. Londoners are being priced out of the neighbourhoods they grew up in or forced to leave the city altogether.”

New London Mayor Must Boost Rental Supply, Says Gill

Published On: May 6, 2016 at 10:58 am

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Categories: Property News

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The Director of estate agents Your Move and Reeds Rains, Adrian Gill, has spoken out about what the new London mayor must do to boost private rental supply in the capital.

New London Mayor Must Boost Rental Supply, Says Gill

New London Mayor Must Boost Rental Supply, Says Gill

Whoever is voted the next Mayor of London – Sadiq Khan or Zac Goldsmith – must regard the private rental sector as an ally, not an enemy, according to Gill.

He describes London as “the capital of renting”, as many Londoners are priced out of homeownership by spiralling house prices. With so many residents forced to live in the private rental sector, Gill notes that London follows an entirely different set of housing rules to the rest of the UK.

“Our capital is suffering from a serious undersupply of homes to let, which is down to an enormous undersupply of landlords taking up investment opportunities,” he insists.

He reports that average rent prices in London have increased by 19% since the last mayoral election in May 2012, and by 35% since Boris Johnson was first elected in 2008.

“In stark contrast, rents across England and Wales as a whole have risen 19% since May 2008,” Gill says. “If London sets the trend for the nation, this acceleration should be a wake-up call.”

He believes: “To prevent a whirlpool of talent draining out of the capital, the new mayor needs to throw landlords a lifeline. To build a sustainable supply of homes to let for the next four years, the mayor must avoid populist anti-landlord policies that yield easy support in the short-term, but prevent people finding a place to rent further down the line. Instead, stimulating more – not less – investment from landlords is the way to keep rents more affordable.”1

Recent research has analysed which London mayoral candidate will be best for solving the capital’s housing crisis: /london-mayoral-candidate-will-solve-housing-crisis/

We will keep you updated as the results of the London mayoral election are revealed.

1 https://www.lettingagenttoday.co.uk/breaking-news/2016/5/agency-chief-warns-new-london-mayor-to-treat-rental-sector-as-an-ally