Close X
Saturday, January 11, 2025
ADVT 
National

Strong Support For B.C. Housing Tax But Little Confidence In Its Efficacy: Poll

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 29 Jul, 2016 01:27 PM
    VANCOUVER — An Angus Reid Institute online poll has found that most respondents support a tax on foreign buyers of Metro Vancouver homes but at the same time doubt how effective the move will be at cooling the region's red-hot real estate market.
     
    Nine of every 10 people who responded to the poll conducted between July 26 and 28 say they support the new property transfer tax. But only six out of 10 believe the initiative will help improve access to the local market for local buyers and increase vacancies for renters.
     
    The poll was released Thursday, the same day the British Columbia legislature passed a law introducing an additional 15-per-cent tax on homebuyers in Metro Vancouver who aren't either Canadian or a permanent resident. The new policy comes into effect Aug. 2.
     
    The provincial government has been facing increasing pressure to take action to address skyrocketing housing prices across the Lower Mainland, which encompasses Canada's most expensive real estate market. This move comes as British Columbians prepare to go to the polls in May 2017.
     
     
     
    Despite Thursday's policy change, seven out of 10 respondents believe affected buyers will manage to find loopholes allowing them to get around the new tax.
     
    Eight of 10 say the government should have intervened sooner to temper the ballooning housing market, including three quarters of those who voted for the incumbent B.C. Liberals in the 2013 election.
     
    The poll found little difference between home owners and renters in terms of their support for both a foreign-buyers tax, as well as another provision that allows just the City of Vancouver to tax vacant properties.
     
    The survey’s respondents are part of the Angus Reid Forum, a 130,000-member panel of Canadians who participate in surveys and discussions. Angus Reid says the forum comprises of people in each major demographic group, and respondents receive a small monetary incentive — from $1 to $5 — for completing each survey.
     
     
     
    The polling industry’s professional body, the Marketing Research and Intelligence Association, says online surveys cannot be assigned a margin of error because they do not randomly sample the population.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Coast Guard Crew Honoured For 'Nick Of Time' Heroics That Prevented Catastrophe

    HALIFAX — It was their last hope of preventing a potential environmental disaster.

    Coast Guard Crew Honoured For 'Nick Of Time' Heroics That Prevented Catastrophe

    Flooding Improves In Saskatchewan; 5 Communities Under States Of Emergency

    Flooding Improves In Saskatchewan; 5 Communities Under States Of Emergency
    REGINA — Emergency management officials in Saskatchewan say things are improving following widespread, heavy rain that brought flooding to several parts of the province.

    Flooding Improves In Saskatchewan; 5 Communities Under States Of Emergency

    Cherry Takes Aim At 'Left-Wing Weirdos' In Critique Of The Tenors' 'O Canada'

    Cherry Takes Aim At 'Left-Wing Weirdos' In Critique Of The Tenors' 'O Canada'
    Members of The Tenors quickly distanced themselves from a rogue Tenor on Tuesday night after a member of the classical-pop group inserted a political statement into the lyrics of O Canada before the Major League Baseball all-star game in San Diego.

    Cherry Takes Aim At 'Left-Wing Weirdos' In Critique Of The Tenors' 'O Canada'

    Ontario Spent $44m To Prepare For Jail Strike That Never Happened

    Ontario Spent $44m To Prepare For Jail Strike That Never Happened
    TORONTO — Ontario spent more than $44 million preparing for a correctional and probation workers' strike that never happened, The Canadian Press has learned.

    Ontario Spent $44m To Prepare For Jail Strike That Never Happened

    What's The Beef? Mandatory Tip At Earls Restaurant In Calgary Stirs Controversy

    What's The Beef? Mandatory Tip At Earls Restaurant In Calgary Stirs Controversy
    CALGARY — A decision by Earls Restaurants Ltd. to eliminate tipping at a downtown Calgary restaurant and replace it with a mandatory 16 per cent "hospitality charge" is stirring controversy.

    What's The Beef? Mandatory Tip At Earls Restaurant In Calgary Stirs Controversy

    B.C. Group Says Death Midwives' Philosophy Similar To That Of Birth Midwives

    "We do not want to be in a battle with the birth midwives," said Pashta MaryMoon of the Canadian Integrative Network for Death Education and Alternatives.

    B.C. Group Says Death Midwives' Philosophy Similar To That Of Birth Midwives