Abstract

Through detailed empirical analysis of a central area of Lisbon, this paper explores whether short-term rental platforms such as Airbnb channel investment in residential real estate and the way in which the local community is affected by the proliferation of apartments rented to visitors. Between 2015 and 2017 we conducted fine-grained fieldwork in the historical neighbourhood of Alfama and identified both the producers and socio-spatial consequences of short-term rentals. Our research did not find evidence of a sharing economy. Rather, it found a process of buy-to-let investment in which different players make profits from rents and displace residents with tourists. The paper develops two main arguments: first, we suggest that Airbnb acts as an instrument that contributes to the financialization of housing. Compared to the traditional rental market, short-term rentals offer a number of benefits that enhance market efficiency for property owners, making them increasingly attractive for both local and global investors. We found that the suppliers of short-term rentals are primarily investors who use housing as an asset to store capital. The main advantage of the short-term rental market for investors is that while they can make profits by renting properties to visitors, they can also sell them tenant-free at any moment. Second, Airbnb gives way to a hyper-flexible rental market that for tenants implies increasing insecurity and displacement concerns. We portray Airbnb as an example of buy-to-let gentrification that is experienced by residents as a process of social injustice.

Highlights

  • Airbnb has become the leading provider of short-term rentals (STRs), and its rapid growth is one of the most discussed topics in cities across the world

  • We consider the expansion of STRs in dialogue with the literature on tourism-driven gentrification and displacement. Following these two theoretical sections, we offer a contextualization of Lisbon and show how the state plays a crucial role in promoting both tourism and investment in real estate

  • In the paper’s conclusion, we focus on the wider implications of Airbnb and tourism for gentrification and housing financialization; we suggest ideas for policymakers and future research

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Summary

Introduction

Airbnb has become the leading provider of short-term rentals (STRs), and its rapid growth is one of the most discussed topics in cities across the world. Authors have linked Airbnb with gentrification and have suggested that landlords change their apartments from long-term rentals to STRs, meaning that in the process they replace tenants with visitors (Cocola-Gant, 2016; Wachsmuth and Weisler, 2018; Yrigoy, 2018).

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