Of all the assets one might wish to hold, property is often portrayed as the most sensible. Markets are stable and it serves a function that other commodities do not.
Home ownership is something most people hope for and in Belgium many people have more than one. The argument for an investment property is especially strong in Brussels, where 60% of residents are renters. And with demand for a place to live so high, no surprise that rents are rising.
You'd have thought then that anyone fortunate enough to possess a second property would hold it close, grateful for the rental income it can generate as well as its (rising) market value.
In fact, one in three landlords in the capital is thinking of selling their property, unhappy with maintenance costs and legal obligations they must adhere to.
The finding, revealed in a survey by KBC bank, poses questions about the property market in Europe's most cosmopolitan city. Is Brussels a less desirable place to live? Have rental controls gone too far? If landlords sell up what would be the implications for renters?
Regardless of who owns them, Brussels greatly needs more housing – a reality almost universally acknowledged as a key policy area in the local elections. The housing question is usually perceived as renters versus landlords but is a new dimension emerging in Brussels?
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