Emergency legislation to freeze rents in Scotland “strikes the right balance” between protecting tenants and ensuring landlords can still offer properties for rent, a minister has said.
Patrick Harvie, the Scottish Government’s tenants’ rights minister, also addressed concerns that the Bill would reduce the supply of rented housing.
The Scottish Parliament is debating the Cost of Living (Tenant Protection) (Scotland) Bill this week, which is designed to tackle the cost-of-living crisis.
On Tuesday morning, Mr Harvie appeared at Holyrood’s Local Government Committee.
The Scottish Green Party minister said the Bill had three main aims: stabilising costs by freezing rent until at least March 31, introducing a moratorium on evictions, and reducing unlawful evictions.
Under the legislation, rent increases will be frozen at 0% until March 31, backdated to September 6, with ministers having powers to extend this for two further six-month periods if necessary.
He told the committee: “The legislation we’re proposing will help keep people in their homes and help stabilise their housing costs during this extraordinary costs crisis.
“We believe the package of measures strikes the right balance between this aim and ensuring landlords can continue to offer properties for rent and manage tenancies sustainably.”
The minister said he did not believe the Bill would lead to many tenants refusing to pay rent.
He said: “The majority of landlords will obey the law and not try to get around it, the majority of tenants will also meet their responsibilities.”
Mr Harvie acknowledged that the Scottish Government had not done much of its intended work to collect data about the private rented sector.
He added: “We will continue to monitor and report on the operation of the emergency legislation.
“I think we’re conscious that some of the data that’s being collected real time is only going to come in as we’re having to make decisions.”
Conservative MSP Miles Briggs said there was international evidence that rent caps led to “quite severe” unintended consequences, including fewer properties being let out and a rise in homelessness.
Mr Harvie said: “There are other European countries with a higher level of regulation, and indeed long-standing systems of rent controls, which have an even bigger private rented sector than Scotland.
“So this can be done properly, this can be done responsibly, to make sure that we raise standards, ensure that there’s protection for tenants and tenants’ rights at the same time as making sure that our housing systems have adequate supply and good quality.”
Earlier on Tuesday, the committee heard from representatives of a number of groups with interest in the legislation.
John Blackwood, chief executive of the Scottish Association of Landlords, said the Bill was “not proportionate”, adding that some landlords were already seeing increased mortgage costs.
He said: “Landlords are affected as well as tenants in the cost-of-living crisis.”
He said the Bill appeared to be “watered down” from the First Minister’s statement several weeks ago, but some landlords had been “spooked” by the changes.
Landlords have been running to the hills— John Blackwood
Mr Blackwood said: “Lots of landlords still don’t know what it means to them. Rents can still go up and evections can still take place.
“Over the last month landlords have been running to the hills, saying rather than put my property up for rent I’m going to sell.”
Timothy Douglas, head of policy and campaigns at Propertymark, said the fundamental problem was a lack of supply in the housing market, which could be made worse by a rent freeze.
Mr Douglas said: “We think this will reduce supply which will increase rents further.”
However Caroline Crawley, member of the tenants’ union Living Rent, urged MSPs to back the Bill.
She said rents were “increasing at insane rates”, with figures in the Glasgow area going up by 30% in the last decade and 42% in the Lothian region.
She said: “It’s just truly unaffordable for people who are working, never mind people who are on benefits.”
The loophole that allows rent increases as people move between tenancies should be closed, she said.
Aaron Hill, of the Scottish Federation of Housing Associations, said extending the freeze beyond March 31 would be an ineffective method of tackling the cost-of-living crisis.
Such an extension would cost housing associations £50 million in the first year, rising to £200 million over four years, he said.
He told the committee: “What that adds up to is fewer homes being built, fewer homes being retrofitted to zero-carbon standards and less service provision in terms of tenants and support than can be offered to them.”
Social rents in Scotland are around half of private rents and are among the lowest in the UK, he added.
If MSPs vote in favour of treating the Bill as emergency legislation – which is highly likely given the agreement between the SNP and the Scottish Greens in Parliament – an expedited process will see the first stage take place on Tuesday, the second on Wednesday and a final vote on Thursday.
The Bill will cover the private and social rented sector, as well as student accommodation.