Close X
Saturday, September 21, 2024
ADVT 
National

Avg home price 67% higher than affordable level

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 29 Sep, 2022 10:04 AM
  • Avg home price 67% higher than affordable level

OTTAWA - The parliamentary budget officer says the national average price of a home in February was more than 50 per cent higher than it was two years prior.

A new report says the average home price reached a peak of $839,600 in February 2022, up 52 per cent from $551,100 in February 2020.

Since then, however, prices have declined by seven per cent, down to $777,200 in August.

Using a methodology developed by the IMF that examines household borrowing capacity and the ability to purchase a home in select Canadian cities, the PBO says the average price of a house in August was 67 per cent higher than what is considered affordable.

Budget officer Yves Giroux attributes the increase in the gap between the average home price and what the average household could afford to higher mortgage rates.

According to scenarios constructed by the PBO, home prices will decline by 12 to 23 per cent by the end of the year from the peak reached earlier this year.

MORE National ARTICLES

Horgan says B.C. is addressing ambulance shortage

Horgan says B.C. is addressing ambulance shortage
Horgan's comments come after an infant in Barriere, B.C., reportedly died waiting for an ambulance, prompting Mayor Ward Stamer to call for flexibility around which first responders are allowed to take patients to hospital.

Horgan says B.C. is addressing ambulance shortage

Man arrested after 3 women assaulted near Vancouver Public Library

Man arrested after 3 women assaulted near Vancouver Public Library
“The woman who was grabbed by the leg left the area before the police arrived, and investigators would like to speak with her,” says Cst Jason Doucette. “There could also be other people who were assaulted in the area who have not yet come forward. Please make a report if you’ve been a victim of crime.”

Man arrested after 3 women assaulted near Vancouver Public Library

3 dead in a semi-truck collision near Golden, Hwy 1 re-open after 37 hours

3 dead in a semi-truck collision near Golden, Hwy 1 re-open after 37 hours
The deceased have been identified as as 25-year-old Tanner Liefting, 30-year-old Brandon Richard Johnson, and 34-year-old Jagsir Singh Gill. Johnson and Liefting were in the same vehicle and were both from Chilliwack, while Gill was from Calgary.

3 dead in a semi-truck collision near Golden, Hwy 1 re-open after 37 hours

Charges laid in Surrey shooting

Charges laid in Surrey shooting
After an extensive three-month investigation, IHIT investigators identified Bradley Minchin as a suspect in the homicide of Mr. Brown. A second degree murder charge has been laid against Minchin in relation to the homicide of Mr. Brown. 

Charges laid in Surrey shooting

Coquihalla crash leaves one dead, one injured

Coquihalla crash leaves one dead, one injured
The driver of the second transport truck, a man from Winnipeg, was trapped and died as a result of the collision. The co-driver in the second transport truck, also a man from Winnipeg, extricated himself from the cab but not before sustaining serious, life-threatening injuries.

Coquihalla crash leaves one dead, one injured

Higher COVID-19 death rates in racialized people: Statistics Canada

Higher COVID-19 death rates in racialized people: Statistics Canada
South-Asians and Chinese people also had higher mortality rates than non-racialized people. The study also found a person’s socioeconomic situation played a role in COVID-19 deaths. People in low income, overcrowded housing and apartments had higher odds of dying from COVID-19.

Higher COVID-19 death rates in racialized people: Statistics Canada