As empty and affordable apartments continue to be a rare commodity in Switzerland, rising rents are pushing people to live closer together, a study writes.
The Swiss housing market has tipped from oversupply to housing shortage at a high and “historically unique speed”, wrote economists from Raiffeisen Switzerland in the “Real Estate Switzerland – 4Q 2023” study, published on Thursday. With supply not increasing despite high demand, the densification required by spatial planning inevitably occurs on the demand side – via the price.
This leads to ever-increasing housing costs, laborious and lengthy searches for accommodation, drastic compromises in terms of space requirements, location quality and occupancy density or longer commutes for people looking for accommodation. The result is a loss of prosperity that will continue to worsen as long as 10,000-15,000 apartments too few are built each year, according to the authors.
Since the new spatial planning law makes it significantly more difficult and sometimes even impossible to zone building land, cities in particular should be densified. However, it is said that this is being significantly slowed down by a flood of objections, over-regulation in the construction sector, hoarding of building land, a lack of willingness to increase zoning in large cities and, most recently, by rising construction prices and financing costs.
According to Raiffeisen, the result of this is “involuntary densification”: the lack of living space forces people to use less space and to group together in larger households. ...