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Interesting article, thanks for the link. Quote:
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The locals and young adults cant afford or find decent jobs and must move, while the lucky property owners cash out a once in a lifetime lottery ticket (buying the house for $200-300K 15-30 years ago and now selling it for millions). It basically is wining the lottery for some of these folks. |
Here are the top two comments from a CNN article that I found hilarious: Quote:
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I saw this pop up on facebook today too: "The Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. is forecasting a 5.1% increase in housing starts in B.C. and an 11% increase in existing home sales in 2014." Just in terms of visuals, I will tell you there are a lot of houses selling right now in New West. Lots of for sale signs, and lots of sold signs. People are not caring about the prices, and think getting $20k off the price is a bargain. |
StatsCan on median family incomes for Vancouver metropolitan area: 62,900 (2006), 66,330 (2007), 68,670 (2008), 67,550 (2009), and 67,090 (2010). http://www.statcan.gc.ca/tables-tabl...il107a-eng.htm So based on a single income earner, I guess the 33k figure for Richmond could very well be realistic. |
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The gov could lower/eliminate income tax and hike up property tax to make sure people are paying their dues, but then those who are working and renting are also getting off 'free'. One way or another, there will always be a group of people who can and will exploit the system, otherwise accountants and lawyers won't have jobs :) |
I think it is a reasonable assumption that a good number of real estate investors driving up home prices are non-permanent residents without Canadian citizenship. For this group of people, wouldn't it be reasonable to slap them with heavy property tax as a deterrent to drive up housing prices? |
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But, property taxes on non-residents is a political decision. Considering that many people work in real estate and in the development industry, it would take immense courage for local politicians to take a stand. Posted via RS Mobile |
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So penalize money coming in from outside of the country ? Good luck seeing that law passed. If it will help politicians get voted, they will do it. More money coming in means a better numbers for economic data, which means these politicians can state that the economy is good (hopefully) under their watch. |
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^^ The primary goal of a government is to look after the interests and welfare of its own citizens, not cater to the investment needs of foreigners. And right now, we have a problem where local citizens are being driven out of the market due to external investment forces. And when the locals are being driven out of the market, sooner or later they will either just leave the city altogether, or they will vote the politician out of their offices. Canada isn't China. Politicians don't get promoted strictly based on their GDP numbers. So it is in the politicians' interest to do something about our real estate / housing problem. |
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Increasing property tax for this selected group of foreign investors should result in some combination of the following 2 outcomes: 1) It becomes a deterrent for these foreign investors to put their money into our real estate market. Demand softens, and prices drops, and the locals are happy. 2) Those that continue to invest in the market will generate additional tax revenues for the local governments. This additional revenue can then be used to fund government programs and operations. Local home owners are not affected by higher property prices, so they are happy too. Since this is an annually recurring tax that applies to foreign investors only, I don't see how it gets rolled into housing prices. I agree that there will be resistance from those that work in the real estate / construction sector. And it is possible that the overall property tax revenue will drop. But I think the overall benefit (of lower RE prices) would be much stronger, and there would be more support from the general (voting) public. Would you please tell me what negatives you see with such a proposal? |
Yes, fair enough. However the bigger cause of home prices being driven up is due to free/cheap credit; I'm not saying foreign investment doesn't play a part, but it is not the driving force causing prices to shoot up in the past (though it makes a fantastic news story). If you want to fix this problem, jack up the property tax on everybody buying property that is not as a primary residence, not just for foreign buyers. The other side, if cities lose their property tax and property transfer tax income, they operate on a lower budget, can't pay to maintain infrastructure and social services, and locals will still leave. So really, keeping the status quo, at least politicians can claim that the economy is looking 'good' |
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You can't. If you do anything that brings about a decrease in property value, here are the people you help: 1) new buyers(younger people) 2) Investors(richer, older people) Here are the people you royally screw: 1) anyone that owns a house and lists it as a primary asset And that is just about anyone. Yes, if you bought 20 years ago and rode the house value up, and then saw it decrease then you gained and lost on paper only and while you were worth more, now you are worth less but you still live in the same house so nothing changed. That is very few people. More likely? I bought and sold a few times and maybe bought at the height of the market. Now I'm screwed. I maybe used home equity to renovate said home. Now I'm screwed. Maybe I bought a new car with home equity...way screwed. See the issue? The mistakes were made in 2002 that no one stopped the housing boom. Why would they? Everyone made a fortune and it covered up some real problems in the US economy and a lot in Canada too. We burned though 30 years in rising value in 8 years. That house I pointed out at UBC gained $1 million in value A YEAR. We now have a problem in that we can't bring wages up to match house value. We can't bring housing down to match wage. We can have house value plateau to wait it out for 20 years, or it can gradually slide down over time. This is in terms of planning. In reality, it can crash at any time. I don't actually know if it will or not. Everyone is planning on more housing selling next year than this year. Apparently $20k off is a bargain these days. |
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I think the fundamental issue is you think that foreign investment is the main contributor to increase in housing prices, whereas in reality I don't believe that to be the case (though I am just a casual observer and no expert in this area). If out of every 100 homes sold, 50 are being sold to foreign investors, then your model could work out assuming those 50 foreign investors want to continue investing given the crazy property tax; if they walk away and leave, then the gov loses out on the income source. |
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The big issue is that many people overused their LOC/Home equity loans (cheap debt) to fund vacations, reno's, and other depreciating assets like cars and recreational vehicles. Now if their inflated house prices drop back down to reality, they will owe more on their houses than what it's worth. The gov't is already well aware of the dangerously high debt-loads that Canadians carry, with the majority of it in housing (mortgages). We've seen them make stricter rules on mortgages last year to try to correct the housing market, and there's another set of changes coming this year. Stricter Debt Ratio Standards on the Way You're right that we should've stopped the housing boom a lot sooner to avoid our precarious situation that we're in now, but it's in our culture to think home ownership as sacred and untouchable. Plus, we really love HGTV. |
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Re Gridlock: Short of policies that are really, really stupid, I don't think the government can dramatically alter real estate prices. Market conditions can pop the real estate bubble, but generally speaking, governments can't. So that means whatever policies the government end up adopting, it will only result in gradual/gentle reductions in housing prices -- ie. soft landing instead of bubble popping. People don't get royally screwed in this case; they just bxtch and whine about how they (think they) are royally screwed, and I am quite ok with that. |
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If your end goal here is to discourage foreign investment by driving their tax up to the point where the market will lower to 'affordable' levels for locals, then yes it has to dramatically affect the market, otherwise it will not be noticeable. Anything that is noticeable will dramatically affect the market, as well as the tax income implications to the gov. Remember locals are not being priced out because they can afford 750k but not 800k. Locals are being priced out because what should cost them 500k is now costing them 800k for no real apparent reason Quote:
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wonder what happens if mortgage rate were up to the rates back in the early 1990s (over 10% I think). That would surely crash the market LOL. And yes those rate are very real back in 1990s. |
I think my parents bought our house back east for like 14,000 or something at 19% interest. Mind you, it had a toilet in the living room, so it was a bit of a fixer. |
I've been watching the prices in NVan forever, def have came down a bit in the last year.. I hope thats a trend which continues for a while. ... and then stops immediately after I buy :D |
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Now, people think, blindly that rates are here to stay - how? Interest rates are a monetary tool to speed up or slow down the economy when need be. If rates are at, effectively 0%, what happens if our economy starts stalling - we NEED rates to normalize so that the next time things f up, rates can be brought back down to allow for easier lending Now, all of this is overly simplified - but the point remains. The US worked it quite well. Emergency low rates, the economy has turned around GDP per capita is stronger, employment improving, rates are thus increasing (due to fed action), will slow down the growth, but that's necessary as otherwise we'll just bubble again Unfortunately for Canada, we didn't crash when we should have, due to commodities - the strong dollar has fucked us over - export businesses hurt beyond belief, consumers are loving it, but that's no good for our economy, we're spending money outside of Canada. What has happened since 2008 in Canada doesn't bode too well for the next 5 years. Sell Canada, buy US is still the right move - not as good as it was 6 months ago (the latter part), I'm just glad the majority of my net worth is in the US and denominated in US $, beyond the increase in asset values in the US, with up coming tapering of QE, the US $ will continue to strengthen, which will continue to hurt commodities above and beyond the china story. All in all, none of these things bode well for joe public home owner who has entered the market since about 2005, 2006 (let's not forget, house prices in Vancouver and Canada were low up to 2003... What happened then, lending regulators got lax, rates went down, real estate started a stupid rise which has now entirely decoupled from fundamentals (price to income, price to rent) - we WILL return to these fundamentals within the next 5 years, I'd guess nearer 3. We're fucked, be liquid, earn income from your assets, and never take on 'cheap' money - rates and prices are, generally, inversely related (there are studies that disclaim this, but they're weak and have too many things over simplified to make the point) |
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