Close X
Thursday, November 14, 2024
ADVT 
India

B.C. Budget Falls Short Of Addressing Affordability Crisis: Housing Experts

The Canadian Press, 18 Feb, 2016 11:08 AM
    VANCOUVER — Measures introduced in British Columbia's provincial budget aimed at tempering Metro Vancouver's red-hot real-estate market miss the mark when it comes to the underlying factors fuelling the housing crisis, say experts.
     
    B.C. Finance Minister Mike de Jong unveiled the province's fourth consecutive surplus budget on Tuesday, which bumped up the exemption level for the property-transfer tax on newly built homes to $750,000. The exemption will be funded by a one per cent tax increase on the value of a home sale above $2 million.
     
    "We want to be cautious about any solutions that are going to have the effect of reducing the value of the homes (people) are already in ... at the same time as we deliver lower costs for people trying to get into the market," Premier Christy Clark said Wednesday as she outlined the delicate balancing act faced by the provincial government.
     
    "The housing market poses really complex issues but I think we've begun to solve some of them."
     
    But housing experts are disputing the effectiveness of her government's approach.
     
    Tom Davidoff from the University of British Columbia's Sauder School of Business dismissed the newly announced tactics as "ill-thought-out, kind-of-nothing proposals."
     
    He attributed the region's skyrocketing housing prices to a perfect storm of a shaky global economic market where people are looking for a safe place to stash their money, and conditions making Metro Vancouver extremely attractive to foreign buyers.
     
    Those include the province's "bargain-basement" property taxes, as well as a market where demand is growing and supply isn't, meaning that earnings come from rising housing prices and not rent.
     
     
    "It's the perfect market for capital to hang out in," he said — one of the reasons prices have continued to rise while the loonie drops in value.
     
    "We're rolling out the red carpet for people who want to park cash, which just doesn't work to make for a productive economy."
     
    He also called it a non-starter when it comes to attracting young, innovative talent.
     
    Paul Kershaw, a real-estate expert and founder of the young-Canadian's advocacy group Generation Squeeze, said B.C. has the worst-performing economy in the country for young Canadians, taking aim at the premier's claims about the province being Canada's economic leader.
     
    "Housing affordability isn't a problem in a couple of Vancouver neighbourhoods. Housing has become unaffordable for young people just in general," he said.
     
    Kershaw said he would have liked to see the province introduce a tax on housing wealth, both to raise revenue and curb the rise in housing prices.
     
    He also proposed charging capital-gains tax on the sale of principal residences, a move he said would treat the housing market less as a speculative investment opportunity and more for its primary purpose of providing shelter.
     
    Kershaw approved of the government's announcement to dedicate $355 million over five years to create 2,000 affordable-housing units, but likened it the to a "drop in the bucket."
     
     
    Tony Roy, head of the B.C. Non-Profit Housing Association, lauded that investment as "fantastic," but raised concerns over its adequacy.
     
    "Overall, (it's) transformational in terms of what it's going to do for the capacity of our sector but a far cry from what is needed."
     
    He said B.C. needs 5,000 subsidized units per year, with 3,000 in the Lower Mainland.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Robert Vadra Hopes Enquiry Is Not For Political Vendetta

    Robert Vadra Hopes Enquiry Is Not For Political Vendetta
    Robert Vadra, son-in-law of Congress president Sonia Gandhi, said on Friday that he hoped the enquiry ordered against him over his land deals in Haryana will not be used for political vendetta.

    Robert Vadra Hopes Enquiry Is Not For Political Vendetta

    In A Landmark Judgment, Indian Supreme Court Prohibits Politicians' Photos On Government Ads

    A bench of Justice Ranjan Gogoi and Justice Pinaki Chandra Ghose however permitted the use of photographs of the president, prime minister, Chief Justice of India and departed leaders, including Father of the Nation, in such advertisements.

    In A Landmark Judgment, Indian Supreme Court Prohibits Politicians' Photos On Government Ads

    With NRI Help, Punjab Targets 1000 MW Solar Energy by 2017

    With NRI Help, Punjab Targets 1000 MW Solar Energy by 2017
    The minister inaugurated a 1 MW solar energy project set up by Britain-based NRIs Avtar Singh Kang and Raovarinder Singh Kang in their ancestral village Lallian Kalan in Jalandhar district with an investment of Rs.7.25 crore.

    With NRI Help, Punjab Targets 1000 MW Solar Energy by 2017

    Land Bill Sent To Select Panel; Rahul Says Government Murdered UPA Act

    Land Bill Sent To Select Panel; Rahul Says Government Murdered UPA Act
    The Lok Sabha on Tuesday referred the land acquisition bill to a joint committee of the two houses after an spirited debate in which Congress vice president Rahul Gandhi accused the NDA government of "murdering" the legislation passed by the previous UPA regime.

    Land Bill Sent To Select Panel; Rahul Says Government Murdered UPA Act

    Modi Seeks To Improve Relations With Pakistan Via Cricket

    Modi Seeks To Improve Relations With Pakistan Via Cricket
    Despite apprehensions raised by some BJP MPs about a proposed India-Pakistan cricket series, Prime Minister Narendra Modi is determined to break the ice with the neighbouring country through "cricket diplomacy", informed sources here said.

    Modi Seeks To Improve Relations With Pakistan Via Cricket

    Dawood In Pakistan, We'll Get Him, Says Rajnath Singh

    Dawood In Pakistan, We'll Get Him, Says Rajnath Singh
    India has credible information that underworld don Dawood Ibrahim is in Pakistan and we will not rest till he is brought back, Home Minister Rajnath Singh said on Monday. But Pakistan denied the fugitive is present there.

    Dawood In Pakistan, We'll Get Him, Says Rajnath Singh