trudeau housing

Justin Trudeau announces plan to temporarily ban foreign home buyers in Canada

In a clear bid to win over millennial voters ahead of Canada'supcoming federal election, Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau just dropped a robust housing plan that includes — among other things — placing temporary bans on both speculating (house flippers) and purchases by foreign buyers.

The idea is that, by reserving houses for actual people to live in — as opposed to, say, letting them serve as tax shelters for wealthy foreign nationals or quick flip jobs for wealthy domestic capitalists — supply will increase enough toease the demandthat's beendriving house prices bonkersin cities like Toronto forthe past decade or so.

In other words, it's a rather bold attempt to addressthe affordability crisisfacing what Trudeau refers to as "the next generation of homeowners"... on paper, at least.

"We're moving forward with a plan to put home ownership back within reach and make buying your first home easier, fairer and more affordable,"said the Prime Ministerof his most-recent campaign promise on Tuesday morning.

"And when you're ready to buy, we'll make sure the process is fair and transparent by creating a Home Buyers' Bill of Rights to stop blind bidding, pause new foreign ownership, and more."

Skyrocketing house prices have effectivelyput the dream of home ownershipwell out of reach for anyone under 40 in major urban centres — save for people who already own a place or have significant help in purchasing one from the Bank of Mom and Dad.

Housing affordability has thus become an important election issue as we approach the Sept. 20 vote, especially among younger Canadians who live in cities like Toronto, wheremillennials are less likely to own a homethan anywhere else in the country.

With average detached home prices nowmore than $1.75 millionin Toronto itself andmore than $1 million across most of the GTA, advocates have increasingly beencalling for some type of government intervention.

Trudeau's version of that intervention includes not only freeing up supply for real home owners, but a newrent-to-own program, double the Home Buyers Tax Credit, a $40,000 tax-free First Home Savings Account and the conversion or build of more than 1.4 million new homes over four years.

The party also wants to implement a bill of rights for home buyers to stop blind bidding, establish the legal right for buyers to have homes inspected before purchase, ensure transparency on the history of recent sale prices and "require real-estate agents to disclose to all participants in a transaction when they are involved in both sides of a potential sale."

"We will temporarily ban new foreign ownership in Canadian housing to ensure Canadians have more access to purchasing homes," reads part of the plan centred oncurbing "unproductive foreign ownership."

"As a temporary measure to help stabilize the housing market coming out of COVID-19, we will ban foreign money from purchasing a non-recreational, residential property in Canada for the next two years, unless this purchase is confirmed to be for future employment or immigration in the next two years."

The plan further proposes an anti-flipping tax on all residential properties that would require them to be held for at least 12 months, unless specific life circumstances change.

"This will reduce speculative demand in the marketplace and help to cool excessive price growth," it notes. "As this tax is introduced rules will be established to ensure that sellers subject to this tax are able to deduct legitimate investments in refurbishment."

Some critics say the measures are too little too late, and that there's no way Trudeau can or will deliver on the three-pronged plan he announced while speaking in Hamilton on Tuesday morning. It's not like the policies his government enacted over the past six years have done anything to help or even stabilize the situation, after all.

But a young Torontonian can dream, and the text surrounding Trudeau's housing plan (whichyou can read in full here) really plays to that sentiment.

“每一个加拿大需要一个叫做家的地方。和for many — young people in particular — the dream of owning their own home feels like it's moving further out of reach," reads the campaign website.

"You shouldn't lose a bidding war on your home to speculators. And you shouldn't have to move far away from your job, your school, or your family just to afford your rent. It's time to change that."

Trudeau is not the only leader with a housing plan, of course: Both the NDP and Conservative parties have already put out their own plans for addressing the housing crisis.

New Democrat Leader Jagmeet Singh isproposing a programthat would build some 500,000 affordable homes over the next decade, as well as a 20 per cent foreign buyer's tax and the creation of 30-year insured mortgages.

Conservative Leader Erin O'Toole's platformfeatures plans to build roughly one million homesin just three years and convert 15 per cent of federal government properties into housing.

Like the Liberals, the Conservatives would also put a two-year ban in place to stop foreign investors from eating up all of the housing supply in Canada.

Federal leaders are doing their best to sway voters in one way or another during this short-but-fiercesnap election campaign, and it seems as though housing issues are a good way to get the public's attention.

In theory, any of the plans proposed to date could do a lot to make buying a home easier (hell, actuallypossible) for some of the population.

That would also, of course, require whoever is elected as PM to keep all the promises as outlined in his platform — something I don't think any politician in the history of North America has done.

Lead photo by

Justin Trudeau


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