Again, this is a long, non-Atheist, rant. If you are reading on the magnificent Planet Atheism<\/a>, or have come to the blog looking for philosophical insights into religion, please feel free to skip.<\/p>\n Depending on which sections of the UK media you have access to, you could be mistaken for thinking that, recently, buy to let landlords are the Earthly incarnation of evil itself and that any day now George Bush will declare war on them. As always, this is especially prevalent in the “left” media (what remains of it) but it has echoes all over. An example, is this weeks “Guardian Money” pages which has a massive spread about the evils of Buy-To-Let, along with a page of letters from readers who also think landlords are the definition of scum. The joys of the internet mean you can now read this online<\/a>.<\/p>\n Before I attack some of the nonsense in these premises, I must declare an interest. I own a house which is rented out. I bought the house knowing I was unlikely to live in it for many a year and I still don’t live in it. I don’t even live in the same country the house is in. As a result, I do worry that legislation which affects buy to let landlords will affect me, and this gives me a fairly strong opinion – I may not be fully objective…<\/p>\n That said, I do try to be objective!<\/p>\n Right, with that ground work underway, we can look at the logic behind the basic premises. The guardian writes:<\/p>\n A tour of the city indicated that small-time landlordism and the transient student population it encourages have turned some areas into “tips” – overflowing wheelie bins and rubbish-strewn front gardens.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n Already it seems we have a problem with the premise, a cause and effect issue – I am not sure it is actually a fallacy, but I am also not sure it is proven. I am not doubting the areas being talked about are in disrepair but there are two assumptions being made here.<\/p>\n For better or worse, we live in a capitalist economy. If there is a demand for rented accommodation, people will provide it. Saying that Landlords “encourage” transient populations is madness, surely it is the other way round? Would a “small time landlord” really buy a property with the hope that renting it out would encourage students to move into the area and rent it off them? I wouldn’t. Also, this seems to speak of a strike against not just the “Big Landlords” who buy all over, but the people who have maybe one or two properties for rent. People who have bought a house as an investment opportunity or inherited. Are they really in bed with Satan?<\/p>\n As the Guardian continues, it seems to get a bit stranger. It is obvious that there is an issue which people feel strongly about (forming “Action Groups” is not the work of the Apathy Society…) but, I suspect the feelings are being misdirected.<\/p>\n “Buy-to-let has caused the physical degradation of the area. Landlords don’t clean up the mess of old furniture and disused pizza cartons, and the students, many from wealthy backgrounds, contribute no council tax,” says Lenton resident Maya Fletcher.<\/p>\n She’s a prime mover in the Nottingham Action Group, one of a number of similar initiatives across the country set up to combat buy-to-let blight. Lenton lies next to the University of Nottingham and in some streets, “studentification” has driven out all bar a tiny percentage of families.<\/p>\n “There’s no more feeding next door’s cat or taking in parcels. The government talks of cohesion and community. We’ve lost it,” she says.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n
<\/a>Personally, I think it is all nonsense. I am pleased about this, as I have noticed a slight left-wing tendency in my previous posts, so hopefully this will bring me back to the centre \ud83d\ude00 .<\/p>\n
<\/a>The basic premise, in this article anyway, is that buy-to-let landlords have little regard for the local “community” and allow their properties to fall into disrepair. The secondary premise, and the main reason people hate buy-to-let-landlords in general, is that people who can afford to buy multiple houses are pushing house prices up, beyond the reach of any first time buyer. This is (sort of) supported by the data which shows the average UK house price is now around seven to nine times the average UK salary.<\/p>\n
<\/a>Before I can attack either premise, I need to point out that there seems a different meaning of the term “Buy to Let Landlord” depending on who you talk to. In the main body of the Guardian article, it seems to be talking about people who purchase houses with a view to turning them into multi-occupancy student accommodation blocks, often shoving many more students into a house than there are bedrooms to cope. The readers letters, however, do not appear to make this distinction on a regular basis.<\/p>\n
<\/a>This grey area of the “enemy” is important (to me), mainly because there are more people who own a second house which is rented out to a family (often bought with that sole purpose) than there are people who own several, high occupancy houses. If you target “buy to let landlords,” you get them all. On the off-chance that the petitions people mention get acknowledged by the government (which they probably will, even if only 10 people sign them, unlike the ID card and road-pricing ones…) it could impact everyone who rents out a house.<\/p>\n
<\/a>First off, the assumption that “small time landlords” are encouraging a student population seems weak. The assumption that transient populations encourage disrepair seems more reasonable, but ironically for a left-leaning newspaper, smacks of Wilson’s<\/a> “Broken Windows<\/a>” theory of crime (ironic, because Wilson pretty much invented right realist criminology). Students can live in an area for up to four years and will often be in the rented house for more than two years. While this seems transient for people who live in an area for 50 years, it isn’t really. The civic disorder alluded to by the newspaper article is also prevalent in many inner-city areas which do not have a transient student population – slum housing has always been slum housing. While I have not been to every city in the UK, I have been to a few and all the ones I have visited have undergone physical degradation. This is not exclusive to student housing so I strongly suspect the assumption that “transient student populations” are to blame is false. If we are going to use “Broken Windows” then it is actually more a case of the local population being unwilling to renovate their area which encourages the transients to litter and foul the neighbourhood.<\/p>\n
<\/a>Also, blaming “small time landlords” strikes me as taking a cheap shot at an easy target. They are not to blame for students going to a University, surely that is the fault of the Uni… There is a massive element of “not in my back yard” to all of this. I am sure the people of Nottingham are happy they have a popular, respected university – along with the students who give the city it’s culture, provide cheap labour, spend money in the local shops etc – but they don’t want the students to live there. This is common all over the UK and not just about students. Small time landlords are not the “Robber Barons” who built the Victorian slums, although you may be forgiven for thinking they are the same. Small time landlords are often people who – for whatever reason – have two houses and have rented one out. Does this mean they are to blame for the social ills of a community? What is the alternative? Should students be forced to buy houses near the university they plan to study at (in addition to coughing up the massive fees)? Should students be forced out into the street? Should transient populations be banned from moving?<\/p>\n