Close X
Monday, November 18, 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

B.C. school district wants staff proof of vaccine

B.C. school district wants staff proof of vaccine
The school board in Delta, B.C., is requiring all its employees to show proof of vaccination for COVID-19 and is giving them less than two months to disclose their status.  Board chair Val Windsor says it is taking the step to reduce the risk of staff and students getting COVID-19.

B.C. school district wants staff proof of vaccine

Burnaby RCMP need your help in locating missing woman Reshmi Mani

Burnaby RCMP need your help in locating missing woman Reshmi Mani
Reshmi is a South Asian woman and 52 years old. Reshmi’s family and friends, as well as police, are concerned about Reshmi’s well-being and are asking the public to share the information provided above.

Burnaby RCMP need your help in locating missing woman Reshmi Mani

Fourth doses not yet needed for most: experts

Fourth doses not yet needed for most: experts
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Monday that the country will have enough third and fourth doses for all eligible Canadians — if or when they're needed — with contracts signed through 2024 with Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna.

Fourth doses not yet needed for most: experts

Ottawa backs away from trucker vaccine mandate

Ottawa backs away from trucker vaccine mandate
Only days before Canadian truck drivers were required to be fully vaccinated for COVID-19 to get into the country or face quarantine, the federal government is backing away from the vaccine mandate. The new rule will still take effect for American truckers starting this weekend, with drivers being turned away at the border unless they've been inoculated.

Ottawa backs away from trucker vaccine mandate

Canada joining Mexico to dispute USMCA auto-rules

Canada joining Mexico to dispute USMCA auto-rules
Canada is joining forces with Mexico to challenge how the United States is interpreting the new rules that govern duty-free cars and trucks. Mexico last week asked for a dispute resolution panel to challenge the stringent U.S. interpretation of the auto rules of origin enshrined in the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement.

Canada joining Mexico to dispute USMCA auto-rules

Canada lacks data to help adapt to climate change

Canada lacks data to help adapt to climate change
A new report suggests Canada is not doing enough to adapt to and prevent the effects of climate change and is lacking the critical data it needs to do so.

Canada lacks data to help adapt to climate change