this post was submitted on 03 Feb 2026
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A Boring Dystopia
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I was asking about the qualitatve difference, not the quantitative.
Citation needed. Im guessing that the minimum is more than a few hundred Euros a month net profit per rented out unit. That's nothing to sneeze at for one household. Especially considering how low effort one unit is (can't be more than a few hours a month).
For private landlords: Definetly not. The needed labour for owning a unit is negligible in comparison to a full-time job.
This might be an ideal but it contradicts with your statement below. And even if: At some point someone wants to make profit off the property. Your "argument" only kicks the bucket down the road until some buyer (and I wonder who can buy inflated house prices) will increase the rent for profit.
Rent-seeking is the most popular form of gaining income, since it requires no work (except for upkeep) and has virtually no risk, compared to a market.
Those larger landlords want even more return of investment. Don't tell me you're so naive to think that no one wants to actually make money of the people with the least power in this dynamic: the tenants.
Aha! So now, we're leaving this ideal world of yours. Why do you think that's actually an anomaly of the system?
You ignore that the housing market is very inflexible. People always need housing, so there is a natural demand, along with incredibly prohibitive costs of entry. People can't afford any homes (that's the housing crisis), because property values are through the roof, driving up rents! You act as if people are too "lazy" to become landlords, but most can't even afford their own homes!