The Paris government has restricted the increase in rent. Real estate agent: tenants are not short of money

From July 1, Paris, France, once again tried out the "rent limit order" for the private housing rental market, which caused a new round of controversy in the real estate industry. PAP, a real estate transaction agent, also investigated the tenant budget. The results show that the average budget of Parisians looking for a house is 776 euros to 9 10 euros (about 6,000 yuan to 7,040 yuan), which means that tenants are "not short of money". Some insiders pointed out that measures to limit the rise in housing prices will prompt owners to transfer more houses to the tourism rental market, further aggravating the current situation of tight housing in Paris.

According to the Parisian newspaper reported in July 1 day, the PAP intermediary studied 598 1 pieces of housing rent information released by Paris housing seekers on its platform in June this year. Advertisers include long-term contract (CDI) employees and students, so the intermediary company analyzed the financial ability of housing seekers in Paris.

Colin Li Zhuo, president of PAP intermediary company, said that the owners have certain requirements for the financial ability of the house-seekers. The standard is usually that the monthly rent of the house accounts for one-third of the monthly net income. The research shows that according to this standard, the average ability of permanent contract employees in Paris to pay rent is 965,438+00 euros per month, and the average monthly rent of houses visited is 8,965,438+0 euros. In Haute-Seine, a suburb of Paris, the highest salary for long-term contract employees is 902 euros, while the average monthly rent for houses visited is 839 euros.

However, students face different standards in finding a house, often depending on the financial ability of the guarantor, and in most cases, the guarantor is a parent. Colin Li Zhuo said that homeowners usually want students' guarantors to earn four times the monthly rent. According to this research report, the average budget of Paris students looking for a house is 776 euros per month.

The background of PAP intermediary launching the above report is the "rent restriction order" that the Paris government tried again.

According to the report, this "rent restriction order" starts from July 1 and ends in 2023. According to the new version of the Law on Housing Development and Digital Facilities Configuration, landlords and tenants must abide by the "reference rent median price" set by the Paris Rent Observation Center (Olap) according to the location, building type, year of construction, nature of the house, number of rooms and furniture situation of the house. , and shall not be higher than 20% of the reference price or lower than the reference price, and the landlord who violates the rules may be fined 5,000 euros to 65,438 euros.

However, PAP intermediary believes that the pricing of rent in Paris does not depend on a "price limit order" to a large extent, and the fundamental problem lies in the tenant's ability to pay.

However, Ian Brossa, deputy mayor in charge of housing affairs, said that the main purpose of the housing development and digital facilities allocation law is to manage extremely unreasonable rents. From 20 15 to 20 17, the old version of the law on housing development and allocation of digital facilities was tried out in Paris, which effectively curbed the soaring rent of the capital in the previous 10 year, during which the rent remained stable, but the law was shelved by the court at the end of 20 17, and then the rent soared again.

The real estate industry believes that the Paris municipal government's re-introduction of rent restriction measures is a "bet" for the municipal elections in 2020. Eric Aroche, executive director of ERA Real Estate Company, believes that this measure will have a negative psychological impact on the owners. "We should not solve the problem of insufficient housing supply by cracking down on owners." Jean-Marc Tororio, president of the French National Real Estate Federation, also believes that this measure will encourage owners to put their houses on rental platforms such as Airbnb, which will further worsen the existing problems in the Paris housing rental market.