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Damn this seems like a hot take given the comments but I think these rules are dumb. If I go on a two week vacation somewhere else I should be able to rent out my place for those two weeks. The issue isn't AirBnB as a whole, it's people buying up places for the express intention of only using it for AirBnB,
There should be some cap on often a place can be used for short term rentals like 4 weeks out of the year, enough that people who vacation somewhere else can use AirBnb and low enough that it makes more financial sense for people to rent it out long term instead of short.
Honestly, I don't understand what everyone has against short term rentals. It may be an unpopular opinion, but shouldn't we let the market decide the best use of a space? For a city like New York that gets visitors and transient workers from all over the world, maybe it would be better for it to have lots of short term rentals. Ultimately the market would find an equilibrium between short term rentals, long term rentals, and owner occupied properties.
I do think there needs to be more regulation for the rentals though, probably similar to hotels. Any property being rented out should be subject to the same safety inspections and regulations.
When it comes to something necessary for survival, like shelter, "letting the market decide" is a terrible idea.
For example: if corporations purchased all of the water so that people couldn't access it, and you had to buy all your water from corporations, you couldn't "let the market decide" what a fair price of water is. They have created this scarcity so they can profit off it, and the amount people are "willing to pay" to live turns out to be about "all the money they have."
Definitely not advocating for full blown free market capitalism. My comment was more along the lines of letting the market organically find the best solutions. The government should set broad goals, like "maximize the amount of occupied housing units and minimize homelessness" and then provide the appropriate incentives to guide the market in that direction.
I agree that for inelastic goods like healthcare, food, water, shelter the situation is even more tricky. NYC just seems to be limited in that sense with already high density and low supply. Having any form of vacant units should be taxed heavily. Maybe even extend this to progressively tax larger units that reduce density. Billionaires row where the ultra wealthy have an entire floor for an apartment that they never use makes no sense to me.
So that's not "letting the market decide the best use of space." That is the Government deciding the best use of space and passing laws to encourage that, which is exactly what is happening here.