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Here’s the latest news on rent control in Nevada.

Op-Ed: Rent control is a great destroyer

The Center Square
November 1, 2024

Argentina’s strict rent control law was passed in 2020. In a bid to provide renters more economic security, landlords were locked into tenant-controlled, three-year minimum leases and rent increases were capped. The policy consequences were swift and brutal. Forty-five percent of landlords elected to sell their properties rather than continue renting them out. The remaining properties were either converted to short-term rentals or had their rental increases front-loaded to hedge against inflation. The average rent for a two-bedroom apartment soared from nearly 18,000 pesos per month ($300 USD) at the end of 2019 to 334,000 pesos ($600 USD) in December 2023, well beyond the 210,000 pesos per month ($378 USD) if the rate had tracked inflation.

In December 2023, Milei explained his rationale for repealing rent control and the other changes he would bring to Argentina’s stagnant, socialist economy: “Ideas that have failed in Argentina have failed all over the planet.”

Milei was not just posturing. Economic theory on rent control is continually vindicated by empirical evidence and supported by broad consensus among economists. Nearly a century of documented case studies by economists F.A. Hayek, Friedman and Stigler, and others across the political spectrum decisively expose rent control as destructive public policy, both theoretically and empirically.

Harvard professor Jason Furman, who served as a top economist for the Obama administration, also came down hard on the idea: “Rent control has been about as disgraced as any economic policy in the tool kit.”