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Middle-income earners are struggling to find housing Middle-income earners best helped by reduction of housing shortage Cabinet aims to quickly improve affordability in housing market Policy focus on affordability ultimately backfires Small group benefits from lower rents Housing associations unable to ramp up housing production as a counterweight Focus housing policy on reducing the housing shortage
Middle-income earners are struggling to find housing
It is currently proving increasingly difficult for middle-income house hunters to find suitable housing. Because of their income, this group of households is more likely to rely on the private rental market than high and low-income earners; they earn too much to qualify for social housing and regularly lose out on the owner-occupied market to more affluent homebuyers. In the last few years, largerent increases in the private sector have damaged housing affordability for middle-income earners. For instance, since 2018, the more than 9% increase in rents at occupancy change - in the regulated and private rental sector - was well above the average annual wage growth over the same period of +3.4% (gross earned hourly wage).
Middle-income earners best helped by reduction of housing shortage
Middle-income earners, who are currently struggling to find housing in the Netherlands, are ultimately best served if the housing shortage abates. In the end, the housing shortage is the root cause behind the poor accessibility of the private rental sector in the Netherlands. This calls for measures that facilitate both market players and housing associations to speed up housing construction,for exampleby reducing building requirements, and measures that slow down housing demand by providing tax incentives for house sharing, for example.
Cabinet aims to quickly improve affordability in housing market
In its recently announced housing policy measures, the cabinet partly focuses on achieving direct rent reductions in the private rental sector as a solution to poor affordability. There is, for instance, aplan to regulate rents in the middle segment of the private rental sector (this bill is currently being considered by the Senate) and a proposal to set anational requirement that two-thirds of new construction should be affordable. This includes homes for sale of up to €390,000, social rented homes or homes with rent of up to €1,123 per month (plus a possible new-build surcharge of 10%). Although the government’s focus on quick solutions isunderstandable in light of the great social pressure to improve the affordability of housing for middle-income earners, the policy focus on affordability is likely to backfire, in our view.
Policy focus on affordability ultimately backfires
The expected effects below show howmiddle-income households in the housing market are ultimately not helped by the plans to regulate rents in the middle segment orthe national requirement for two-thirds affordable housing construction:
- Housing production slows down: the financial viability of housing plans will be reduced by both policy plans, as they lower the expected rental income and therefore investor returns. Property developers will likely try to modify existing housing plans to improve expected returns (by, for example, building smaller homes). This will, however, delay housing construction, implying that middle-income house seekers will continue to suffer from the tight housing market.
- The rental housing stock will decrease: regulating rents in the middle segment puts downward pressure on the expected investment return from existing housing rentals. As a result, landlords are expected to sell existing homes into the owner-occupied market more often after a lease expires. While this increases housing supply in the owner-occupied housing market, it reduces supply in the rental housing market by the same number of homes. Middle-income housing seekers dependent on the private rental sector are thus worse off due to this shift.
- Demand for rental housing increases: lower rents are expected to increase interest in vacant rental housing. For instance, young people living in their parental home with no immediate desire to move are more likely to become active in the rental market due to lower rents. Middle-income housing seekers who rely on the private rental sector will experience more competition as a result.
Small group benefits from lower rents
Although the policy plans will also see households benefiting from lower housing costs than they would have without the policy, the existing housing shortage is expected to increase further. Time will tell to what extent the households that do benefitare middle-income households.
Housing associations unable to ramp up housing production as a counterweight
Housing associations are unable to quickly ramp up the construction of (mid-rent) housing to counterbalance the lower housing production by market players. This is firstlybecause housing corporations already lack financial resources for their operational activities in the social segment, which is the core of their raison d'être. Secondly, offering rental housing in the middle segment has lost strategic priority within most housing associations. This is to an important extent due to previous policy changes that forced the sector to focus more on activities in the social segment. As a consequence, housing associations have lost some of the knowledge required to develop and operate mid-rent.
Dutch housing policy partly focused on symptom relief
Main price dynamics free sector rental market and possible policy responses
Focus housing policy on reducing the housing shortage
Middle-income earners in the housing market are thus best served by reducing the housing shortage. This calls forpolicies that enable both housing investors and housing associations to build housing faster. In addition, the government can aim to reducehousing demand. Structural solution directions are therefore: