Published: 30 Mar 12 13:24 CET | Print version
Online: http://www.thelocal.se/39994/20120330/
Sweden is looking at loosening current restrictions facing flat owners who want to sublet their apartments in an effort to help ease the current housing crunch in large cities.
What do you think? Leave your comment below.
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It seems that on more and more fronts, Sweden is realizing that their 'unique' approach to a lot of matters simply doesn't work.
I have no other words for it then calling it retarded that an apartment I own, I can't rent out without asking someone else for approval and then get restricted in the amount of money I can charge for it. Aside from the fact that you usually don't get that permission or only for a very limited amount of time, such as 1 year.
In terms of permission...again I agree as long as there are rules etc to protect homeowners ie. if the owner of an apartment above me rents it out to a group of University students that party all the time etc, then there shold be rules/penalites/notice period that the Housing Association can impose to stop the noise. You can imagine...you send severl amillion on a nice apartment and then the neigbouring apartment is rented out to a noisy family/group etc. The owners living in their own apartmet shoul dhave some protection
The rules should be in place, but they don't have anything to do with renting. You bring up the example of noisy university students (which is legit), but what if the students instead of renting the apartment, they buy the apartment?
What laws/rules are in place to protect the owners of the adjacent apartments? If there are laws/rules in place, they exact same can be used to protect against renting to "inappropriate" people
At present renting for a year or two is generally approved by the board, so this is not such a great problem.
There are two reasons why finding a rental flat in Stockholm is very difficult (a) primary tenants illegally sublet and (b) more flats need to be built. These proposals do not address the real problems but will break something thats works well.
How people who do nothing about it get into office is beyond me.
Presently we seem to have an overabundance of new condominium (apartment) buildings but I would guess that most of these new buildings will not allow rentals. Whether it is true or not, buildings that allow all units to be rented are perceived of being of less value in real estate terms than those that do not allow rentals.
Are there no purpose built apartment buildings in Stockholm or Sweden in general - is every apartment owned? Here in Victoria there has been little incentive for developers to build rental buildings versus owned but hopefully that will change in the future. We too have a very low vacancy rate which makes it difficult for students particularly to find housing but I don't think it's as bad as Sweden by any means.
Please do as your name says! The main reason for the 'black market' that currently exists is because of restrictive rent controls. Ultimately a free and open market is the only way supply will meet demand.
No developer will want to build new apartments in an environment where imposed restrictions will not allow them a descent return on their investment.
Ever wonder why buildings are allowed to deteriorate?
This is how: owner rents out his flat, then a flat next door opens up for sale, single owner buys and rents it, too, then after a few iterations our real estate investor becomes a landlord, and as the building ages and maintenance costs rear their ugly head those costs are eschewed in favor of profit transmogrifying our landlord into a slumlord. Owner - Investor - Landlord - Slumlord.
Rather than control rental amounts/lease periods, a mandatory carve-out of rental income into an escrow account usable only for maintenance may be an answer. In any case, loosening rental regulations has always proven to be a step in the wrong direction.
After mucking-up Sweden's healthcare system, I wondered what the Moderates would next target for wealth aggregation. Now I know.
Nothing changes vis a vis the association. Same as before, if your tenant is an anti-social bastard, the association can force you to vacate it.
I, for one, would like to buy an apartment for my children to have in 10 years time and rent it out until they need it. I don't see anything immoral in that.
1) a flat has immediate neighbours, above,below and on each side plus shared facilities. A house does not require this level of interaction. Bad or out of control neighbours in a flat are a serious social menace.
2) so buy the kids a house.
3) while you rent out your flat, for 10 years, I assume that you will make no contribution to the running/maintenance of the flats - basically you want to freeload. Enough freeloaders create a downward spiral. As a previous post noted, in Canada owner occupied blocks are more desirable.
In most democratic nations, it's the other way around.
She cannot buy an appartment (the salary is too low), she cannot get a first hand contract because her parents did not put her in the queue when she was born. So she just finds appartments on the black market where the owners ask for 12000kr for a 2 room appartment without making a legal contract.. Or she finds a room somewere in an appartment .. not really a suitable location for her children. Not mentioning that she has to move from appartment to appartment and the kids have to move from dagis to dagis because she can get a place to live for only max 1 year... Also the persons putting anouncements on blocket do not respond to your emails, they close the conversation when they hear you have childrens, you are foreigner or that you work as a nurse.
When you have the belly full you do not understand the hungry people. It is easy to say that this is not the solution and the solution will be to make new appartments.. but it does not work like that. There are some appartments beeing built, but for one of those there are minimum 500 people in the queue ...