Close X
Thursday, November 14, 2024
ADVT 
National

Ottawa Should Do More To Cool Toronto, Vancouver Real Estate Markets: OECD

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 01 Jun, 2016 12:00 AM
    TORONTO — The Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development says Ottawa needs to introduce measures aimed at reducing some of the risk associated with soaring home prices and household debt levels in Toronto and Vancouver.
     
    The OECD says in a report issued today that the possibility of a housing market correction, particularly in Toronto and Vancouver, could threaten the country's financial stability.
     
    Finance Minister Bill Morneau recently increased the minimum down payment for homes over $500,000, a measure aimed specifically at cooling those two markets.
     
    As of February, borrowers must put down 10 per cent on the portion of a home over $500,000.
     
    Homes below that threshold still require only a five per cent down payment.
     
     
    But the OECD says more measures should be introduced to reduce some of the risk stemming from soaring house prices and high household debt levels.
     
    It says those measures should be targeted at Toronto and Vancouver, which together comprise a third of the country's real estate market.
     
    The OECD also called on the federal government to tighten mortgages rules in its last report in December.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Statistics Canada Says 69 Per Cent Were Dual-Income Households In 2015

    Statistics Canada Says 69 Per Cent Were Dual-Income Households In 2015
    The report says the proportion of dual-income families was 69 per cent in 2015 compared with just 36 per cent in 1976.

    Statistics Canada Says 69 Per Cent Were Dual-Income Households In 2015

    300 Firefighters From South Africa Arrive To Fight Flames In Northern Alberta

    300 Firefighters From South Africa Arrive To Fight Flames In Northern Alberta
    Kim Connors of the Canadian Interagency Forest Fire Centre says the mobilization represents the largest group of wildland firefighters ever brought into Canada.

    300 Firefighters From South Africa Arrive To Fight Flames In Northern Alberta

    Schools Look To Address Mental Health Effect Of Student Debt

    Schools Look To Address Mental Health Effect Of Student Debt
    While schools attempt to lessen the load by offering financial aid, average student debt appears to be climbing. So some institutions are also responding by beefing up their mental health services to help students cope with life in the red

    Schools Look To Address Mental Health Effect Of Student Debt

    New Child Benefit Could Pose Pitfalls For Divorced Couples: Lisa Raitt

    The Liberals' new $23-billion-a-year benefit will replace three different programs on July 1 with one income-tested payment to families each month.

    New Child Benefit Could Pose Pitfalls For Divorced Couples: Lisa Raitt

    Atlantic Canadians Eager To Return To Work After Wildfire In Fort McMurray

    Larry Coleman is in Springhill, N.S., waiting for the okay to get back to his job of building scaffolding for other trades at Syncrude

    Atlantic Canadians Eager To Return To Work After Wildfire In Fort McMurray

    Climate Change Scientists Ask Federal Government To Reject B.C. LNG Project

    Climate Change Scientists Ask Federal Government To Reject B.C. LNG Project
    The $36-billion dollar plant backed by Malyasian state-owned energy giant Petronas is slated to be built south of Prince Rupert, B.C.

    Climate Change Scientists Ask Federal Government To Reject B.C. LNG Project