Close X
Tuesday, September 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

CMHC President Warns Against Scapegoating Foreign Buyers In Housing Debate

The Canadian Press, 01 Dec, 2016 12:02 PM
    VANCOUVER — The president of the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. is warning against an "us versus them" mentality in Vancouver, where he says foreign buyers are not the major factor driving unaffordability.
     
    Evan Siddall delivered a pointed speech on Wednesday to the Greater Vancouver Board of Trade, where he said housing should not become a wedge that divides newcomers from long-time residents.
     
    "When a white person buys a house, we don't notice. When somebody of a different colour does, we do. That's not good economics," he said.
     
    Vancouver's skyrocketing housing prices have increasingly been blamed on foreign capital flowing from China. The British Columbia government introduced a 15-per-cent tax on foreign buyers in July in response to those concerns.
     
    Asked by reporters whether he believed racism was playing a role in the housing debate, Siddall said he wouldn't use such a "strong term," but the contrast between "us and them" was a factor.
     
    "We notice things that are different better than we notice things that are similar," he said.
     
    "It's a more captivating story than it is that somebody who has the same complexion as me bought a house for $30 million. Why is that not just as newsworthy?"
     
     
    Siddall said in his speech Vancouver's market was already starting to slow down before the foreign-buyers tax was introduced. Evidence from Sydney and Hong Kong shows the effect of similar taxes to be short-lived, he said, and in fact the only impact may be psychological, with investors sitting out because they believe the tax will work.
     
    While offshore buyers are one factor contributing to unaffordability, he said, they are not the only factor. The most important factors over the long term are economic: rising disposable incomes, increased inflows of people and lower mortgage rates, he said.
     
    He added that lagging supply is also a major problem. In Vancouver, the mountains and water are a physical constraint, but an "attachment" to low-density single-family housing in many neighbourhoods represents regressive urban planning and makes the problem worse, he said.
     
    Siddall said Vancouver and Canada were attractive to newcomers in part because of their diversity and inclusiveness.
     
    "Thus far, our inclusive Canadian society has shielded us from the divisions that haunt the U.K., after the Brexit vote, the U.S., as we saw in the presidential elections, and indeed much of the Western world."
     
    He noted that data on foreign investment in local housing markets is notoriously scarce and challenging to obtain. But a report released Wednesday by the CMHC showed foreign ownership of condominiums in some of Canada's largest cities has slowed down since last year.
     
    Foreign ownership was the highest in Vancouver and Toronto at 2.2 per cent and 2.3 per cent, respectively. However, that was down from 3.5 per cent in Vancouver and 3.3 per cent in Toronto in 2015, according to the report.
     
    The report said the relatively higher shares in Vancouver and Toronto in 2015 were due to an unusually high proportion of foreign ownership in newly constructed condominiums.
     
     
    Foreign ownership of condos in Montreal slipped to 1.1 per cent from 1.3 per cent a year ago.
     
    Siddall noted that the share of foreign ownership is likely higher among single-family homes.
     
    The government agency defined a foreign owner as a person whose primary residence is outside of Canada.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Amber Alert Cancelled After Four-Year-Old Vancouver Girl Found Safe And Sound

    Amber Alert Cancelled After Four-Year-Old Vancouver Girl Found Safe And Sound
    Police were concerned for the girl's safety after her mother allegedly took her from her guardian's home in Vancouver on Thursday afternoon.

    Amber Alert Cancelled After Four-Year-Old Vancouver Girl Found Safe And Sound

    Toronto TV Journalist Becomes Canada’s First Hijab-Clad News Anchor

    Toronto TV Journalist Becomes Canada’s First Hijab-Clad News Anchor
    Massa, 29, said on Friday that she became Canada’s first hijab-wearing television news reporter in 2015 while reporting for CTV News in Kitchener, Ontario, a city west of Toronto.

    Toronto TV Journalist Becomes Canada’s First Hijab-Clad News Anchor

    Drug Users Take To Vancouver's Back Alleys To Help Peers Stay Alive

    Drug Users Take To Vancouver's Back Alleys To Help Peers Stay Alive
    Vancouver Coastal Health says the Vancouver Area Network of Drug Users has developed outreach teams of two people each that will also walk the streets to guide peers to use safer injection techniques and pick up discarded equipment.

    Drug Users Take To Vancouver's Back Alleys To Help Peers Stay Alive

    Review Following Serious Crashes Finds Bus Travel In B.C. Is Safe

    Review Following Serious Crashes Finds Bus Travel In B.C. Is Safe
    Minister Todd Stone ordered a private consulting firm to conduct a study after dozens of passengers were injured in two unrelated bus crashes in 2014 and 2015 on the Coquihalla Highway

    Review Following Serious Crashes Finds Bus Travel In B.C. Is Safe

    Evening Walk In Edmonton Ends In Emergency Hospital Trip For Pregnant Woman

    Police the 25-year-old woman suffered serious but non-life-threatening injuries when she was hit in a marked crosswalk early Thursday evening.

    Evening Walk In Edmonton Ends In Emergency Hospital Trip For Pregnant Woman

    Tests Required To Determine Responsibility Of Calgary Brothers In Sex Assault Case

    Tests Required To Determine Responsibility Of Calgary Brothers In Sex Assault Case
    The sentencing hearing for Corey Manyshots, 25, and his brother Cody, 21, was scheduled to continue today but has been postponed until Dec. 8.

    Tests Required To Determine Responsibility Of Calgary Brothers In Sex Assault Case