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Poilievre’s Housing Hell video offers a lousy, analysis of our housing crisis

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    #51
    More silly crap from Crop?

    So by you're own definition Crop, you are a freeloader! LOL

    As a farmer you are getting subsidies and handouts from taxpayers.

    As a retiree and senior you will be receiving healthcare, financial support and other social programs paid for by taxpayers.

    A "hypocrite freeloader" by your own definition!


    Last edited by chuckChuck; Dec 11, 2023, 07:46.

    Comment


      #52
      Population growth is the housing issue politicians can’t keep ducking

      [url]https://www.theglobeandmail.com/politics/article-housing-population-growth/[/url]

      Rapid population growth, driven primarily by an unprecedented boom in temporary residents – mostly temporary workers and foreign students – has turbocharged demand for Canada’s slow-growing stock of apartments and houses.

      That’s not the fault of those foreign workers and students. It’s the fault of governments whose planning and policies have failed miserably.

      Those are the failures of Ontario Premier Doug Ford ([url]https://www.theglobeandmail.com/topics/doug-ford/)’s[/url] government, which has allowed a foreign student boom to grow, without adequate plans for housing. And Prime Minister Justin Trudeau ([url]https://www.theglobeandmail.com/topics/justin-trudeau/[/url]), whose government didn’t monitor or limit that, and also expanded temporary-worker programs ([url]https://www.theglobeandmail.com/business/article-new-temporary-foreign-worker-pilot-program-to-speed-up-approvals-for/[/url]), all without adequate plans for housing.

      And still politicians say little about it.

      When Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre puts out a 15-minute video called Housing Hell which purports to explain the causes of Canada’s housing crises, we should expect that it won’t avoid a key factor. But it did.

      ​One reason federal politicians have been reluctant to talk about population growth is that they do not want to appear to be anti-immigrant. That’s a good reflex, even if it is partly political calculation.

      Immigrants are not the problem – governments are. They failed to plan. It is not really higher targets for permanent immigrants that are driving the growth, either, but an essentially unplanned expansion of temporary residents, who now number 2.2 million. Blame governments.

      So it’s distressing to see an opposition politician pledging to fix the problem – Mr. Poilievre – miss this key point.

      The Conservative Leader’s video included valid points about the slow growth of Canada’s housing ([url]https://www.theglobeandmail.com/topics/housing/[/url]) stock. Accelerating building is the real medium- and long-term solution. However, that process will take years.

      But Mr. Poilievre’s claim that houses are a lot more expensive in Canada than in the U.S. because of Ottawa’s inflationary deficits doesn’t really add up: The U.S. has run far higher deficits, noted economist Mike Moffatt, a Western University professor and senior director of policy at the Smart Prosperity Institute

      Mr. Poilievre makes an argument for why deficits and monetary policy caused inflation but that is largely part of another debate. Canada’s housing-price spike isn’t just general inflation ([url]https://www.theglobeandmail.com/topics/inflation/[/url]).

      Inflation lifted prices about 29 per cent of the last 10 years, according to Statistics Canada, but Prof. Moffatt noted that in Ontario, home prices went up by 120 per cent – in Tillsonburg, 228 per cent. That’s not ordinary inflation. Something else is happening with supply and demand.

      Mr. Poilievre’s video offered a bizarre version of housing supply and demand, arguing Canada has lots of land (so lots of supply) and a small population (so not much demand.) But people live in homes, with walls, and connected to infrastructure. And it is growth in population that drives demand: If Canada had a population of 100 million that shrank by five million in a year, home prices would plummet.

      Comment


        #53
        So one prime minister spending more than all the other prime ministers put together has nothing to do with it ??
        you need a lesson in economics

        Comment


          #54
          CC… you missed the point of the cost of housing.
          Vancouver/ Toronto land administration costs Are 9 to 11 times Edmonton Winnipeg Maritime residential land administrative over head cost of 3 times the cost of the residential facility.

          increased taxing of vastly over inflation boosted land regulatory and base land costs… plus carbon taxes in cold Canadian climates … are making residential housing unaffordable for over 50% of Canadians… affluent Canadians won’t go without a roof over their families….
          This system is rigged to reward administrative overreach and over taxation of those who can least afford the cost. Very stupid and sad.
          Not the actual true construction cost of the actual residential unit.

          Governments create inefficient top heavy costs… not better service or healthy people.

          Blessings and Prayers

          BTW…

          EV are no different.

          Cheers as we freeze in the cold for lack of energy…while that energy is locked in the ground…by stupidity.



          Comment


            #55
            "But Mr. Poilievre’s claim that houses are a lot more expensive in Canada than in the U.S. because of Ottawa’s inflationary deficits doesn’t really add up: The U.S. has run far higher deficits, noted economist Mike Moffatt, a Western University professor and senior director of policy at the Smart Prosperity Institute

            Mr. Poilievre makes an argument for why deficits and monetary policy caused inflation but that is largely part of another debate. Canada’s housing-price spike isn’t just general inflation ([url]https://www.theglobeandmail.com/topics/inflation/[/url]).

            Inflation lifted prices about 29 per cent of the last 10 years, according to Statistics Canada, but Prof. Moffatt noted that in Ontario, home prices went up by 120 per cent – in Tillsonburg, 228 per cent. That’s not ordinary inflation. Something else is happening with supply and demand.​"

            Comment


              #56
              And yet most people and nearly ALL young Canadians can really identify with Pierre’s video
              you and this out of touch writer are a part of the very few that think it’s ok to shovel taxpayer money into a black hole
              at least one reporter (Vassy) is asking these criminals in power some hard questions
              she caused one to start convulsing on national TV

              Comment


                #57
                Do you really think once Crypto becomes Prime Minister that the housing supply will increase and prices and rents will come down? If so, you must also still believe in Santa Claus!

                Pierre gives us the equivalent of another " crypto currency will help us fight inflation" with his dumbass idea that lots of land solves the housing problem.

                "Mr. Poilievre’s video offered a bizarre version of housing supply and demand, arguing Canada has lots of land (so lots of supply) and a small population (so not much demand.) But people live in homes, with walls, and connected to infrastructure. And it is growth in population that drives demand: If Canada had a population of 100 million that shrank by five million in a year, home prices would plummet.
                Last edited by chuckChuck; Dec 11, 2023, 08:53.

                Comment


                  #58
                  Yes , absolutely , if , and that’s a big if , he can get rid of the gate keepers

                  Comment


                    #59
                    The gate keepers? HUH? Your just repeating his talking points.

                    The housing file is complex and it will take multiple ways to make sure every person whether low income or high income has affordable housing.

                    Governments have to invest in and use incentives for affordable housing for low income people who don't have a down payment or an income to afford a house in our large cities.
                    Last edited by chuckChuck; Dec 11, 2023, 09:01.

                    Comment


                      #60
                      Well seeing how PP has Never had a job other than a paid politician, collecting a FULL Pension since he was 31 years old and living in taxpayer subsidized housing . then RENTING to other Con Mps , this DOES Not sound like the guy to be giving advice on housing or to be Playing the role of the Common man

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