Close X
Tuesday, January 14, 2025
ADVT 
National

Biggest Factor In Toronto's Red-hot Housing Market Is Demand: Minister

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Mar, 2017 11:45 PM
    TORONTO — Ontario's finance minister said Friday that while he is considering a tax on foreign home buyers for Toronto and beyond, it's not the biggest factor when looking at ways to cool the housing market.
     
    As an influx of people move to the province, in particular the Greater Toronto and Hamilton Area, the growing demand for housing — also fuelled in part by low interest rates — is outstripping the current supply, Charles Sousa said.
     
    "I still want to fulfil what I said I would do a year ago: obtain the evidence, obtain the information, get the data necessary to then make an informed decision as to what is happening," he said after a cabinet meeting.
     
    "Some are arguing that the foreign degree of engagement is the last piece, that it's not the largest amount that's creating the boom in our homes, in our housing market. A lot of speculators within the domestic market are also playing a role, but the biggest part of course is demand."
     
    The Toronto Real Estate Board is urging Sousa not to implement a foreign-buyers' tax, arguing it would do little to address the problem of rising house prices.
     
    "The fact that most foreign buyers are looking to purchase a home for their family, for personal use, or to provide a tight rental market with much needed supply is something to be encouraged, as these actions are essential to Ontario's economic success," president Larry Cerqua said Friday in a statement.
     
    "Imposing a tax on foreign buyers will not have the desired effect of cooling the housing market and could create adverse effects on the national, provincial and GTA economies."
     
     
    Last year, Sousa said Ontario would not be following the lead of British Columbia, which implemented a 15 per cent tax on foreign nationals buying homes in the Vancouver area. Instead, the provincial Liberal government doubled the rebate on its land transfer tax for first-time homebuyers to $4,000 and raised the same tax on homes that sell for more than $2 million.
     
    But house prices have continued to soar, with February data from TREB showing that the price of a detached, single-family home rose 29.8 per cent from a year ago. The average price of a detached home in Toronto is now more than $1.5 million.
     
    Sousa said he "absolutely" wants to encourage greater housing supply and he is talking with mayors in the Toronto and surrounding regions about how to do that.
     
    "We do have a lot of room for supply, but it's still slower than the demand, which is increasing evermore," he said. "Interest rates are part of the issue. They're low and so affordability within those interest rates are providing for some of that demand."
     
    Bidding wars are driving up housing prices far beyond Toronto, in communities such as Guelph, Hamilton, Kitchener and Stratford, Sousa said, adding he has to consider what a rise in interest rates would do to those buyers.
     
    "We don't want them to assume exorbitant amounts in debt if there's a change in interest rates, for example," he said. "So whatever we do, I'm more concerned about the unintended consequences of those decisions because I've got to be mindful of market forces that still will prevail."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Vancouver Council Debates Where To Spend Opioid-Crisis Tax Dollars

    Vancouver Council Debates Where To Spend Opioid-Crisis Tax Dollars
    VANCOUVER — Councillors in Vancouver are mulling how to spend about $3.5 million in tax money earmarked for addressing the ongoing illicit drug overdose crisis that claimed 215 people in the city last year.

    Vancouver Council Debates Where To Spend Opioid-Crisis Tax Dollars

    A Dream Come True: Numbers For Lotto 6-49 Winner Came While He Was Sleeping

    A Dream Come True: Numbers For Lotto 6-49 Winner Came While He Was Sleeping
      Bahadur Sultani and his mother won $5.3 million in the Lotto 6-49 draw on Dec. 28.

    A Dream Come True: Numbers For Lotto 6-49 Winner Came While He Was Sleeping

    Tent City Cleanup At Courthouse Involves Removing Drug-Contaminated Soil

    Tent City Cleanup At Courthouse Involves Removing Drug-Contaminated Soil
      Workers and heavy equipment were at the 3,000-square metre site Tuesday to clear the land.

    Tent City Cleanup At Courthouse Involves Removing Drug-Contaminated Soil

    Man Charged With Assault, Uttering Threats After Rebel TV Reporter Confronted At Women's March

    Man Charged With Assault, Uttering Threats After Rebel TV Reporter Confronted At Women's March
    EDMONTON — A man faces charges stemming from a political rally in Edmonton on the weekend.

    Man Charged With Assault, Uttering Threats After Rebel TV Reporter Confronted At Women's March

    Cheers, Jeers For Prime Minister Justin Trudeau At Calgary Town Hall

    Cheers, Jeers For Prime Minister Justin Trudeau At Calgary Town Hall
    CALGARY — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau launched an impassioned defence for balancing the environment and economy at a raucous town hall in the heart of oil country Tuesday.

    Cheers, Jeers For Prime Minister Justin Trudeau At Calgary Town Hall

    Rain, Wind Gusts, Freezing Rain Make Messy Mix In Maritimes; Moving Into N.L.

    Rain, Wind Gusts, Freezing Rain Make Messy Mix In Maritimes; Moving Into N.L.
    New Brunswick Power reported more than 91,000 customers had lost power as of 6 a.m. local time, while 12,000 customers in Nova Scotia were also without electricity.

    Rain, Wind Gusts, Freezing Rain Make Messy Mix In Maritimes; Moving Into N.L.