This strikes me as a convenient scapegoat more than anything. None of the major parties dares admit that more affordable housing would require home prices to drop
So let's blame the scary REIT bogeyman!
For those that seek a future that brings together the best of the insights and objectives of people who, within the social democratic and democratic socialist traditions, have worked through farmer, labour, co-operative, feminist, human rights and environmental movements, and with First Nations, Métis and Inuit peoples, to build a more just, equal, and sustainable Canada within a global community dedicated to the same goals.
This strikes me as a convenient scapegoat more than anything. None of the major parties dares admit that more affordable housing would require home prices to drop
So let's blame the scary REIT bogeyman!
We need a massive, WW2-style investment in home construction, and we need housing prices to go down. That's something that the NDP believes in more than any other party. Take a look at this response in the last leader's debate, where Singh actually pushes back on the notion that housing should be an investment and prices should keep going up. You think Poilievre or Trudeau are going to say anything like that?
The fact is though, that REITs are buying up massive amounts of property, have perverse tax incentives, and have a lot of political influence through their accumulation of capital over the past decades.
It's definitely corporations. It has been for a long time. I knew that corporations were pushing up housing prices for at least 10 years.
I haven't seen any stats to back this up? I've seen lots showing FTHB being overtaken and replaced by mom and pop investors though.
"mom and pop" has such a nice and fun ring to it. Not like scary "REITs". Ironically though, people who own 1 share in a REIT are less of a problem than every single "mom and pop" investor who wants to ban REITs altogether.
Don't get me wrong, both should be eliminated.
I'm not going to do your research for you, but I'll do you the favour and provide this: https://www.cbc.ca/news/business/real-estate-investment-firms-financialization-housing-1.6538087
We've gone through a very long time at very low interest rates. This means that investors who would normally buy bonds for safekeeping have no choice but to put their money elsewhere. For example, stocks and Real estate.
Due to the free money that we had before interest rates started to rise, stocks were at an all time high but it's not based on fundamentals and higher earnings, so P/E ratios have gotten worse. And there has yet to be a big market correction (that is coming). This makes value investors nervous, but again, there's nowhere else to put the money that gets a good return.
So what would you do if you can't buy treasury bonds and the market is a big bubble? Real estate. Also, the real assets is good to offset any bad bets a corp made in the casino we call a stock market.
So yeah... corporations. All you have to do is follow the money. It's always the same old story. Raw greed and political corruption.
It's a known problem in the US, there just hasn't been any data showing it's an issue in Canada (yet), that I've seen.
But statscan does have data on mom and pop investors:
- The proportion of investors among owners varied from 20.2% in Ontario to 31.5% in Nova Scotia.
- Among houses and condominium apartments, just under one in five properties was used as an investment in British Columbia, Manitoba, Ontario, New Brunswick and Nova Scotia combined.
Thank you very much for this source.
When I discuss policy with "mom and pop" landlords. They always say that they're not the problem it's other people that's the problem. This source shows that investment in general is the problem.
I like the breakdown between owner-occupier and the different types of investors. I also like the distinction between second residences and units intended to be rental properties.
Some bias, but I also like that the introduction showcases that the empirical data corroborates the conclusion reached by supply-demand theory (emphasis mine):
the study by Allen et al. (2018) also found that an increase in the percentage of houses purchased by investors in a given area led to higher prices in that market.
This is some serious data. Thank you again.
Meanwhile, the government is allowing The Montreal Shuffle
Let's say rent is $1000/month for existing tenants: