Please note, I don't mean to be a 'commie' or a socialist. By which I mean my question isn't a political question. It's an economics question. After all property is a form of capital, and the landlord-tenant agreement is a form of capital-labor agreement. But is our current model an optimal one, where holders of a certain type of capital take no risk and therefore creates a higher barrier on the true engines of economic growth (individuals / businesses) as they look to create value? By optimal above, I mean optimizing for hard metrics like growth and GDP, I am not even talking about 'fluffy' things like equality or distribution of wealth. Put another way, would we have been creating more jobs or companies had capital-driven fixed costs like rent been revenue-linked?
For a typical business, rent cost might 3-4% of total costs, if that. So maybe moving to a revenue-linked rent model may not move the needle. But for retail businesses (restaurants, stores, etc), could revenue-linked-rents drive a fundamental shift in those industries towards more efficiency? I do worry that there are broader mores / expectations / incentive structures at play which may make it quite difficult for a fundamental rethink of how to secure value from property capital. To put it another way, if landlords today are used to securing returns on their assets with zero volatility (beyond the credit risk on the tenant), would they be okay introducing volatility into their cash flows? Even if such a model proves to be better from a systemic / macro-economic growth perspective (big if), what's the incentive at the micro level for the market to move in that direction? Perhaps marginally higher occupancy rates?
Just to clarify, this is a topic that I am not at all qualified to talk about, so this is more idle musing than clearly laid out or justifiable argument. I guess it's finally time for me to finally read Thomas Piketty's 'Capital in the twenty first century'!
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