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The Moral Case Against Rent Control

October 16, 2008 By Adam Hengels

In Market Urbanism’s four part series on rent control, I avoided the topic of the morality of rent control, as I intended to address the economic issues and leave the morality to others. Thankfully, J. Brian Phillips of the Ad Hoc Committee for Property Rights is an expert on the subject. In his blog, he linked to the recent Retail Rent Control post, and took the time to address the moral issue:

But the real issue isn’t political. The real issue is moral. A large part of the public sees nothing wrong with forcing others to provide for their wants and desires. And there is a steady stream of politicians all too eager to propose laws to grant them their wishes. They think that their wishes can somehow transform reality, that if they pass a law with the intention of creating affordable widgets, affordable widgets will result. They think that politicians are nothing more than genies who can grant their wish simply by writing a law. It doesn’t work that way. Reality is not malleable to one’s wishes.

He makes plenty of good points, so I recommend reading the whole post. He concludes:

Each individual has a moral right to live for his own happiness. He has a right to the fruits of his labor. He has a right to pursue his values without intervention from others, so long as he respects their mutual rights. Human beings are not sacrificial animals.

Also, here’s another another article on the morality of rent control: Why Rent Control is Immoral by Michael S. Berliner, Ph.D.

The morality issue belongs as a prominent part of the rent control discussion, but is seldom heard among all the progressive anti-market rhetoric.

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Filed Under: rent control Tagged With: J. Brian Phillips, morality, property rights, rent control

About Adam Hengels

Adam is passionate about urbanism, and founded this site in 2007, after realizing that classical liberals and urbanists actually share many objectives, despite being at odds in many spheres of the intellectual discussion. His mission is to improve the urban experience, and overcome obstacles that prevent aspiring city dwellers from living where they want. http://www.marketurbanism.com/adam-hengels/

  • DVA

    I actually find the moral argument much less compelling than the usual economic arguments (i.e. price controls create shortages, and oh look, there’s a chronic shortage of housing here in NYC). To play devil’s advocate here, the easy response to this is that privileges come with responsibilities, and that the privilege of having the government enforce your property rights comes with the responsibility of using those rights in certain ways. In a similar vein, you have a moral right to do as you like with what you own, but only insofar as it doesn’t harm others. This latter argument hinges on one valuing community: the harm referred to is not the end of one particular transaction when someone loses their lease to unaffordable rent increases, it’s the steady erosion of that community as this happens repeatedly. (The destruction of the community, being non-quantifiable, is then an externality that the market doesn’t deal with.)

  • DVA

    I actually find the moral argument much less compelling than the usual economic arguments (i.e. price controls create shortages, and oh look, there’s a chronic shortage of housing here in NYC). To play devil’s advocate here, the easy response to this is that privileges come with responsibilities, and that the privilege of having the government enforce your property rights comes with the responsibility of using those rights in certain ways. In a similar vein, you have a moral right to do as you like with what you own, but only insofar as it doesn’t harm others. This latter argument hinges on one valuing community: the harm referred to is not the end of one particular transaction when someone loses their lease to unaffordable rent increases, it’s the steady erosion of that community as this happens repeatedly. (The destruction of the community, being non-quantifiable, is then an externality that the market doesn’t deal with.)

  • DVA

    I actually find the moral argument much less compelling than the usual economic arguments (i.e. price controls create shortages, and oh look, there’s a chronic shortage of housing here in NYC). To play devil’s advocate here, the easy response to this is that privileges come with responsibilities, and that the privilege of having the government enforce your property rights comes with the responsibility of using those rights in certain ways. In a similar vein, you have a moral right to do as you like with what you own, but only insofar as it doesn’t harm others. This latter argument hinges on one valuing community: the harm referred to is not the end of one particular transaction when someone loses their lease to unaffordable rent increases, it’s the steady erosion of that community as this happens repeatedly. (The destruction of the community, being non-quantifiable, is then an externality that the market doesn’t deal with.)

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