Renters in Berlin have a radical plan to seize apartments from landlords and are set to force a referendum that could revolutionize the battle for fair rent
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Thomas Colson
May 21, 2021, 17:27 IST
Business Insider
Renters in Berlin plan to force a referendum on nationalizing thousands of apartments in the city in order to lower rents.
Under the plan, landlords would be forced to sell their apartments to the city, which would then lower the rent.
Activists have more than half the 240,000 signatures needed to force a referendum.
It is the latest front in the battle for fairer rents after plans for a rent cap were overturned in the city.
Like many cities around the world, rents in the German capital of Berlin have soared in recent years, doubling in the last decade alone.
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But unlike many other cities, the people of Berlin are actually doing something about it.
First residents persuaded the local authorities to bring in a rent cap that instructed landlords to freeze rents at 2019 levels.
Now local campaigners are planning something even more radical: a bid to nationalize thousands of privately owned apartments in the city.
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Specifically, campaigners want the government to take apartments from real estate firms that own more than 3,000 apartments, place them into public ownership, and rent them out at more affordable rates.
The estimated market value of the real estate in question is up to €36 billion ($44 billion), CityMonitor reported, but the group has suggested compensation of as little as €8 billion ($10 billion), arguing that the prices are based on speculation and overpriced rental yields rather than real value.
"The housing market in Berlin seems like paradise if you've lived in London or Paris," Jonas Becker, a 30-year-old academic who lives in the German capital, told Insider.
"The housing market in Paris is absurd because you can't find any affordable housing. But that's an evolution we see in Berlin as well. The rising rents don't correspond anymore to wages, and that's something we want to address."
Becker is a spokesman for a group of housing activists called "Expropriate Deutsche Wohnen & Co," referring to the city's biggest real estate group.
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The group says the compensation would be provided to landlords gradually using the rents, rather than costing the taxpayer.
Berliners are rising up for fairer rents
The idea is certainly very radical, but it is gathering plenty of support from Berliners.
A petition started in February for a referendum on the plan has already collected 130,000 signatures, meaning there is a very real possibility that Berlin authorities will be forced to hold a referendum on the subject in September.
"For my generation, it's nearly impossible to own a building or an apartment - something that has been very possible for our parents," said Becker. "We will probably rent our whole lives."
The group wants to collect 240,000 signatures by the end of June, which would be enough to force a referendum on the subject. There is also a strong chance that the referendum could pass, forcing lawmakers to consider the plan: A poll carried out in April indicated that 47% of Berlin residents supported the proposal, with 43% opposed and 9% undecided.
However, even if the referendum is successful it will be a struggle to actually get the plan into legislation. Die Linke, the left-wing party with 69 seats of 709 in Germany's parliament, is the only one to have offered the proposals formal support, Deutsche Welle reported. Germany's dominant conservative parties have been quick to condemn the proposals.
Nonetheless, Becker said that even talk of a referendum has pushed radical solutions for Berlin's rental problems into mainstream dialogue. "Many people now consider us a real opponent they have to deal with, not as left-wing radicals who want a revolution. That's not what we want to do," he said.
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