Close X
Monday, November 18, 2024
ADVT 
National

PBO puts estimate on feds' foreign homeowner tax

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 31 Jan, 2022 10:59 AM
  • PBO puts estimate on feds' foreign homeowner tax

OTTAWA - The parliamentary budget officer is estimating that a new federal tax on vacant, foreign-owned properties may not bring in as much as the Liberals hope.

The one per cent tax was to take effect at the start of the year and the Finance Department estimates it will bring in $200 million in the 2022-2023 fiscal year, which begins in April.

Over five years, the government expects to yield $700 million from the tax on properties that are sitting vacant, or which officials deem to be underused.

In a report looking at the measure, budget officer Yves Giroux's office projects the tax won't pad coffers by as much as federal estimates.

His report estimates that the government will bring in $130 million from the measure during its first year, and $600 million over five.

Giroux's report notes some uncertainty with any estimates over what he notes are the "uneven breadth and quality of data available" about foreign ownership that could overestimate or underestimate actual values.

The report also points to potential behavioural changes that could affect the final accounting as owners adjust usage of their homes to avoid paying a tax that amounts to one per cent of the property's value.

Giroux's modelling relies in part on the experience of British Columbia, which in 2016 enacted a 15 per cent foreign buyers’ tax in Metro Vancouver, and since it raised to 20 per cent and expanded it to other communities.

That tax had a short-term cooling effect, but prices have been on a stratospheric rise since 2019. The Canadian Real Estate Association's latest figures on the Vancouver market show the average price in December 2021 was $1.23 million, a year-over-year increase of 17.3 per cent from the just over $1 million recorded in December 2020.

The Liberals have made some adjustments to the original plan to tax vacant, foreign-owned homes by offering an exemption for vacation properties owned by non-Canadians like Americans who come to B.C. in the summer.

The government's economic update in December estimated that the exemption would reduce revenues by $30 million in the coming fiscal year, and then $25 million in each of the ensuing four years.

The tax on vacant homes is one part of the plans the Liberals have laid out to crack down on rising home prices that have risen rapidly over the course of the pandemic, fuelled by low interest rates and demand for larger houses.

Research by the Bank of Canada suggests part of the recent spike in prices is linked to an increase in activity from domestic investors who expect values to continue to rise.

The Bank of Canada last week lifted its promise to keep its trendsetting interest rate at its rock-bottom level. When it starts hiking rates, the increase will filter through to the rates charged on mortgages.

The bank's second-in-command last week said higher interest rates alone wouldn't temper activity and prices in the country's housing market.

"The most important thing that will restore balance to the housing market in Canada is an increase in supply," said senior deputy governor Carolyn Rogers. "Supply has not kept pace with demand and we think that's an important thing that needs to happen."

MORE National ARTICLES

Catalytic converter theft leads to assault on Vancouver woman

Catalytic converter theft leads to assault on Vancouver woman
On October 4, just before 7:30 a.m., the victim confronted two men who were actively removing the catalytic converter from her vehicle, which was parked near Renfrew Street and East 1st Avenue. The suspects deployed bear spray when the victim approached them. The suspects are still outstanding.

Catalytic converter theft leads to assault on Vancouver woman

StatCan says economy added 157,000 jobs in Sept.

StatCan says economy added 157,000 jobs in Sept.
Statistics Canada says the unemployment rate would have been 8.9 per cent in September, down from 9.1 per cent in August, had it included in calculations Canadians who wanted to work but didn't search for a job.    

StatCan says economy added 157,000 jobs in Sept.

Tam says reason for optimism in fourth wave fight

Tam says reason for optimism in fourth wave fight
Dr. Theresa Tam said the efforts made to slow the spread where the virus is surging appear to be working. She said hard lessons must be learned about the risks of removing public health measures too soon, particularly in areas where not enough people have been vaccinated.    

Tam says reason for optimism in fourth wave fight

RCMP union will support members who refuse vaccine

RCMP union will support members who refuse vaccine
The Liberal government announced this week that core public servants, including members and reservists of the RCMP, must be vaccinated or face suspension without pay as early as Nov. 15.

RCMP union will support members who refuse vaccine

'I can't back down' on vaccine message: B.C. MLA

'I can't back down' on vaccine message: B.C. MLA
Politicians accustomed to sparring in British Columbia's legislature have joined forces outside the house to push for higher vaccination rates in the north, but a longtime member of the Opposition Liberals says the "Alberta influence" is a factor in a part of B.C. where intensive care units can't accommodate the influx of COVID-19 patients.

'I can't back down' on vaccine message: B.C. MLA

VPD warns public after woman attacked at bus stop

VPD warns public after woman attacked at bus stop
The victim, a 22-year-old South Vancouver resident, was waiting at a bus stop near Knight Street and East 57 Avenue on October 5, when she was approached by a stranger in a red puffy jacket with a fur-lined hood.

VPD warns public after woman attacked at bus stop