
Keine schnelle Lösung für ein kaputtes Wohnungssystem – Wenn Wohnraum mindestens doppelt so teuer ist, wie er sein sollte, gibt es nur zwei kurzfristige Lösungen: Niedrige Einkommen müssen verdoppelt werden, oder die Wohnkosten müssen halbiert werden.
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Something the Hill is forgetting about is the undeniable factor of low-density.
50 years of suburbs and a refusal to allow reasonably sized apartments in our largest cities has directly led to this problem. If we can’t build a 4 floor apartment building in Toronto or Edmonton neighborhoods without people rioting, how on earth can we expect to ever lower the price to entry?
Lowering income won’t build more houses.
Lowing house prices won’t build more houses.
What we need is to increase Canada’s productivity.
Housing is not double the price it should be in the vast majority of Canada
Hyperbole life this doesn’t help the issue
You could double everyone’s income tomorrow, but if the housing supply remains short incomes will just immediately get absorbed into higher home prices.
And neither of those solutions can happen quickly. So we need to be realistic about the time horizon to solve housing affordability. It will take decades to achieve the income growth on one hand and to either hold housing prices where they are or see a slow decline downwards. For wage inflation to outpace housing inflation will be very difficult to achieve because of all the challenges of adding housing supply to market. Even when zoning and regulation is revised to make building housing either, there’s the reality that it’s not as appealing for developers to build housing when prices are flat or declining, and construction costs and very high land values mean we can’t build housing for the costs people can afford. I haven’t seen a realistic solution to this short of development of subsidized rental housing.
No there’s no quick fix, which is why everyone and their dog have been screaming from high heaven for over a decade now that we need to get the ball rolling. Every government we’ve had has just passed the buck, unwilling to make any policy decisions that would lower home values even slightly.
„cut costs“ is code for cutting taxes, which doesn’t make funding infrastructure, non-market, or public services any richer.
Because are they talking about making drywall and concrete and lumber cheaper?? Are they meaning the 50% of total project costs being the price of land will magically be cut in half?
This is shortsighted and reductive.
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And cutting home costs will cause other problems. So would doubling minimum wage, though that would be fun to see, all those Americanized corporations would fold up like wet newspaper. But that would cause massive job losses.
The first sentence is the most important. No QUICK fix.
Government housing en masse and Vienna style public housing out of our parking lots would do a lot of work to fix this issue.
I’ve got a bit of a working theory that the current housing issue isn’t a problem in and of itself but rather a symptom of a deeper problem, I just can’t quite pin down the actual root of the issue so much as other symptoms of it.
We’ve got boomers refusing to retire, creating workplace cultures that require 10 years of experience for entry level jobs at entry level pay and have next to zero training budget, racking up HELOC’s, collecting dwellings like they’re Pokémon, filling their homes with trash, refusing to downsize to an appropriately-sized home later in life, aggressively pursuing restrictive covenants, voting and railing against anything and everything that could lead to visible changes in their environment (public transit, bike lanes, zoning that promotes density, etc), largely voting for provincial and federal governments that continue to push failed trickle-down garbage and policies that completely destroy the status quo and publicly funded programs they relied on, completely dismantled anything that looks like institutional knowledge in both the public and private sector in favour of short-term contractors for everything, and in a lot of cases flat-out refusing to participate in the families that they spent a good deal of their 40’s and 50’s pressuring their millennial children to have. They also built algorithmic barriers to entry into financial markets through the creation of things like credit scores and the proliferation of credit cards.
And so now millennials and later are in this position where their parents’ generation has created a downright hostile environment for them to navigate in order to get a career, be paid appropriately within those careers, progress within those careers without constantly job-hopping. They can barely spend the disproportionately small amount that they do get paid (compared to their parents generation in the same roles) on anything but necessities, can’t afford to live in the neighbourhoods they need to live in in order to both have those careers and raise the families they were pressured into having, have anything near the level of support their parents had when raising them, and just broadly get anywhere near the same level of quality of life and financial security as their parents had at the same age.
Obviously there are exceptions in both of these scenarios, so please spare me the “well I’m a millennial who’s retiring at 45 with a big house that’s fully paid off”, or “boomers elected Carney”, or “but my dad votes NDP”, and similar replies. Yes, I’m painting these generations with a broad brush, but it’s an accurate depiction of what we actually see playing out in the real world, though not everyone falls neatly into these descriptions.
It goes so far beyond just *housing*, and it’s all connected. What were the factors that caused a generation to decide that every single advantage they had in life needed to be removed? How did we get to a point where the average birth year of people buying homes in 2026 hasn’t changed all that much from the average birth year of people buying homes in 1986? How were so many people convinced that institutional knowledge is a bad thing and that doing next to nothing in-house while outsourcing everything that could possibly be outsourced would be cheaper and lead to better spending power? Why did these people have kids and then push their kids to have kids if they didn’t plan on participating in the same ways their parents did? Why did “fuck you, I got mine because I deserve it and you don’t” become such an accurate blanket way to describe the sentiment that so many of these decisions feel like they’re based on? What was it that broke an entire generation and led them to making these decisions that have created such a financially hostile landscape for their children and beyond? And how do we fix it? Because they’ve also done a very good job ingraining that sentiment into just about every facet of our society.
We should be trying to raise wages regardless. The more we foster consumption by our lower-income consumers, the more it stimulates the economy, and the faster the velocity of money gets. Everybody gets richer.
Cheap housing is old housing.
Unless you have a time machine or want to subsidize housing heavily – political will, consistency, and time is the only solution.
Even if we have everyone land for free and people here only had to pay the cost to build a new build – they will still say it’s unaffordable.
Climate change has more to do w house pricing than almost anything else
It’s a global issue and Canada is not immune. Blaming our politicians, especially federal, is derivative grievance politics and will result in nothing
The issues are much more complex than that
I am a Gen-X homeowner with no mortgage and I say burn the real estate market to the fucking ground*, because I don’t want to find myself in a 3D printed guillotine at some point.
The perpetuation of every Great Canadian Policy Failure™ is based on the wishful thinking than Canadians are uniquely immune to lashing out in a manner that would be expected in every other civilization in history to exactly the same social and economic forces.
My house was a cheap piece of shit built when Diefenbaker was Prime Minister, we bought it because my wife liked the landscaping and really no other reason, it isn’t worth the nearly a million dollars its assessed at, it wasn’t worth what we paid for it when we bought it seventeen years ago.
*Please read this sentence in the cadence of the „I’m from Buenos Aires“ guy in Starship Troopers.
How did we get here and what do we do about it? Since the article above is paywalled, here’s a resource with a full overview of Canada’s housing crisis, and comprehensive summary of housing trends since confederation, by John Pasalis.
[The Great Sell Off: How Our Homes Became Someone Else’s Business.](https://youtu.be/U_mMnbmjc1g?si=mPt7Z4zR3-Tf334X)
>In this episode, John Pasalis unpacks his new report, The Great Sell-Off, which explores how Canada’s housing market has undergone a fundamental shift. He explains how homes have evolved from places to live into powerful financial assets, how this shift has driven a wedge between prices and incomes, and why today’s housing crisis can’t be solved with yesterday’s assumptions.
[Introduction to The Great Sell Off](https://youtu.be/pGbXgcDIYag?si=xoIkS0x-NfPagNt2)
Low incomes need to double, and the billionaire class needs to be taxed more. Corporate tax loopholes need to be closed. And our governments need to look into price gouging for necessities, including bank and interest charges.
As a home owner I support halving the value of my home, as it’s completely disconnected from reality. It’s more than doubled in value since I bought it and I frankly didn’t feel it was worth what I paid for it to begin with
Let’s take this out of the context of the housing market and just apply it to the economy in general.
Incomes are being left in the dust by inflation. I’m waiting for employers to just get used to me laughing on the way out of an interview for them offering what now is considered poverty wages. Anything under $25 an hour doesn’t pay the most basic bills, forget about disposable income. Full stop.
I actually have a degree no criminal record a vehicle and all the things I need to be successful in the workforce and people are still throwing $.60 to the dollar of what I need to survive. And some of them may even have policies that you can’t work anywhere else or for competitor so working two jobs in the same field is a non-starter, which makes things even more difficult.
The ~~maple leaf~~ ***Ponzi scheme*** forever!
It had to end during the great resignation. Instead, we chose to exploit migrants as a country. For shame, Canada, for shame.
We should have started a deflationary economic model back then, the economy is overinflated on fake value, chasing GDP over GDP per capita. What a bunch of bullshit for the Z’s and Alphas. Like Goye’s Saturn devouring his son.
Almost all Mps own, 40% of the Mp’s own rental properties. Why would take action that would reduce their personal networth?
Absolute worst guy for the job… His appointment is an absolute head scratcher. His appointment is a red flare in the air that Carney is not who he claims to be. Didn’t even mention the guy is all smiles during a press release where he gets to bail out developers. The guy that oversaw the origins of the housing crises in Vancouver and called anyone who raised the issue racist. I could go on but… But I have rent to pay.
I am a homeowner and mortgage free, so technically I guess I am one of the bad people in this crisis as an older Gen-Xer. I would like to see housing costs fall, including my own, rather than wages double for a couple reasons.
First is, simply raising wages without corresponding increases in productivity would only raise prices. There are all sorts of historical examples: Britain in 70s, Brazil during their hyper inflation crisis, and of course Covid most recently.
There is also a huge problem in raising wages in Canada or any other high tax Western country even ignoring the inflation problem it creates: we can’t. If you raise my salary by $10,000 I get to keep maybe $5000 and probably less once other deductions and non-income taxes are taken into account. The bigger the wage increase the less of a percentage I get to keep. I don’t live there, but I believe Britain has an effective salary cap of £100,000 due to precipitous spike of the marginal tax rate after that amount. I assume if we raised everyone’s wages we would all get taxed more to pay for it.
While anecdotal, I can speak from personal experience that the issue of high housing prices is regulation causing new supply to be strangled. You simply cannot build affordably or quickly.
Here is just one example of the problem that probably represents the challenges faced by the rest of the country. I have 2 adult kids near me in the Lower Mainland. My ex and I both own our homes mortgage free. We bought and built when it was still „easy“. She would like to build a carriage house where she could live and rent/sell the house to the boys and their families. There is no way she can overcome the environmental, archeology, BC energy step code, geotech, zoning variances, etc….for a 600 sq ft apartment over an existing garage. I’m on a huge acreage with no neighbors and I am basically prohibited from building anything new as well. I could throw a million dollars at the problem (if I had it) and there would still be no guarantee I would have a legal structure at the end of it all.
I realize being able to live rent free and mortgage free is a privilege that others don’t have, but it really shouldn’t be so difficult and expensive to add-on or expand.
I think we might also be forgetting one other part – houses are twice as nice as most of us actually want or need.
Between 2016 and 2019 , the little city that I live in, I went to go see five cute little houses that were under $100,000.
four of them got bulldozed and only one of them survived and unfortunately, I wasn’t the winning bidder.
I would even be open to a row house as long as I got to have a tiny little backyard. But out here, even the condos they are building are McMansions.
We have the opposite problem that Toronto has where it has too many 300 square-foot condos and we have none.
Housing prices will remain high so long as the cost to build new housing is as expensive as it is. Assuming our population continues to grow (the current situation notwithstanding), prices overall can’t fall when you can’t produce a new unit of housing unless its priced at bascially the highest price level for that market.
i’d be happy to let all the single-family house people keep their houses as luxuries, and just built a HUGE amount of rental housing that is affordable.
There are some quick fixes like getting rid of rent control and taxable assessment caps, and making evictions easier and quicker. But other things we need to do will take longer.