Don't need to build as many houses if you remove the speculators buying them out and renting them out for a premium,
Building more home right now will disproportionately help realtors, and speculators more than anyone.
Vacancy is pretty much zero across the major Canadian cities. We have the lowest housing per capita in the G7. There is objectively not enough housing in Canada and it’s absolutely delusional to say otherwise. Is this wishful thinking just a form of NIMBYism? Do you own a SFH and you want to “preserve the character” of your neighbourhood or something?
Where are you getting that building more homes will disproportionately help realtors and speculators? Even non-market housing, like co-ops and social housing? How in the world does that even work?? Why would speculators like that? I hate speculators, but your theory makes no sense whatsoever!
There is not a single urban economist, right or left, who agrees with you. With beliefs like this so widespread, it’s no wonder we don’t enact any policies to actually help with the housing crisis.
The point is that landlords and speculators drive up costs - period.
If you want to ease the housing crisis you could in theory build you're way out of it. You could also bale water out of a boat while it's sinking.
Now what if you plug the hole while bailing out the water?
Speculators are the fucking hole.
Want a second home? Cool. Make them pay 20%+ tax on it a la Singapore:
The goal of building enough homes to have an OVER supply (a la Japan) is virtually impossible in the next two decades. So why not deal with the fact that speculators now outnumber first time home buyers and make them pay a huge flat tax beyond a primary residence?
The idea that we'll simply build out way out of a crisis 10+ years in the making while importing millions more people at the same time is laughable. It's also going deepen the wealth divide even more.
They are involved in assignment sales a lot of the time though.
Given that speculators and now a larger segment of the market than FTHB, I think making a 3,500,000 unit problem a 2,.000,000 unit problem, while also driving down rents is a huge fucking win.
30% of Canadians are speculators. The leader of the official opposition at the federal level is a speculator. Tax the fuck out of speculators, minimum 25% and/or ban them.
That is absolutely not true. Tokyo famously has some of the most affordable real estate of any major world city. You can buy a spacious detached home in the Tokyo area for less than in Hamilton, ON. Despite the stereotype, Japanese homes are bigger than the average in most European countries.
Montreal has had the most affordable housing of the big Canadian cities. Why? Because they have the least land restricted to single family homes. Check out this zoning map. Even now, Montreal has three times the housing starts of Vancouver.
The reason why we build shoeboxes is because we preserve single family home zoning. Super high density towers, or super low density suburbs, the two most expensive forms of housing with nothing in between. To tackle affordability, we need missing middle housing. And I totally disagree about using up space: suburban sprawl sucks. I want to live in charming medium density!
Why are we listening to a Ana Bailao? She was part of the government that dropped this particular ball. Why don't we ask Mike Harris what to do about water treatment, or Kathleen Wynne what to do about power generation?
"I always look at it in three buckets: You need the approvals, you need the people to build these things and you need a way to finance it," said Ana Bailão
Workers:
Economists have long argued that the federal government needs to adjust its immigration targets to bring in more electricians and plumbers.
Financing:
"[The CMHC program called ] RCFI no longer works because the interest rates are too high," Keesmaat said. "The government could very quickly act to lower the rate of borrowing through RCFI for new construction projects."She says that would tip some development projects back into viability.
The federal government's decision to eliminate the GST on purpose-built rentals is expected to add tens of thousands of units to the housing market.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau this week announced the move to waive the federal portion of the HST on the construction of rental housing.
Mike Moffatt, senior director of policy and innovation at the Smart Prosperity Institute in Ottawa, is still trying to figure out precisely how the elimination of the tax will impact supply.
"When I talked to developers in my capacity as a minister of immigration before today, one of the chief obstacles to completing the projects that they want to get done is having access to the labour force to build the houses that they need," he said.
Economists have long argued that the federal government needs to adjust its immigration targets to bring in more electricians and plumbers.
The key, Bailão says, is making that pressure stick, so the elimination of the GST is just the beginning of broader changes to address the crisis in a meaningful way.
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