
Soaring Construction Costs Dent Developer Margins From Buenos Aires to Bengaluru
Rising construction expenses are suppressing new supply in Argentina and France, while tenant protections in Switzerland, Spain and India reshape the rental investment calculus.
In Argentina, construction costs have risen 21.75% year-on-year to roughly US$1,450 per square metre, while new apartments list at US$1,700–1,800 and used units trade as low as US$1,300–1,500. The result is a margin-crunch that stalls fresh projects. Across France, production costs and labour scarcity are compounding a similar divergence: housing transactions in the existing stock are tumbling, yet prices have corrected just 0.4% annually, leaving developers caught between stubbornly high inputs and tepid demand.
The response is piecemeal. Argentine firms now offer financing that stretches years beyond the build period—sometimes 48 months—and quietly substitute cheaper materials or alter designs. Land prices in outer areas have slumped to a two-decade floor, attracting cautious speculators betting on a macro turn. France relies on state support schemes to stimulate the new-build segment, but these barely dent the affordability gap for middle-income buyers.
Regulatory frameworks are adding a second layer of friction. In Switzerland, buy-to-let investors must navigate an opaque rent-setting system: to defend a rent as ‘locally customary’, a landlord needs five nearly identical comparable properties in the same administrative quarter—a standard the courts accept so rarely that the economist Urs Hausmann calls it a ‘lottery’. Spain, meanwhile, mandates tenants a minimum five-year stay regardless of the contract term, with repossession possible only for tightly defined own-use cases. The effect is to embed long-term uncertainty into yield calculations.
India’s tax code and tenancy law further shape the calculus. Salaried renters can reduce taxable income through House Rent Allowance exemption, provided they maintain rent agreements, payment trails, and, for higher-value rents, their landlord’s tax number. The Model Tenancy Act, though still being adopted state by state, gives landlords clear eviction pathways—two months’ arrears trigger the procedure—and penalises overstaying tenants with double rent, rising to four times after two months. As the income-tax filing deadline approaches and central banks watch inflation, the tension between building costs, legislated tenant protections and market clearing prices will test housing models in multiple hemispheres.
| Indian & South Asian press | 0.00 | neutral |
|---|---|---|
| Latin American press | +0.20 | neutral |
The taxpayer should leverage HRA to reduce their tax burden before the deadline.
The article simplifies tax rules into immediately applicable tips, making the tax benefit appear obvious and urgent.
The gap between new and secondary housing prices, which is the central theme of the original story, is not mentioned.
The tenant has the right to stay up to 5 years, by law, regardless of what was signed.
The authority of the law is invoked to present tenant protection as indisputable and overriding the contract.
The impact of this regulation on new construction supply or on the price gap is not discussed.
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