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Though it does have a couple of subway stops now. And a couple of bus routes that are passably frequent (15M or better service much of the time).... Most routes are still mediocre in terms of service and ridership. The subway is inching it up, so is the regional rail (GO Transit's Barrie Line) which is now mostly 2-way, all-day service, but that's still hourly outside of rush hour. Its improving, but slowly. |
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Two pertinent point to the conversation – which are relevant to most cities in the western world – is not the actual volume of new units, but what the composition of those units are, and the level of affordability. Constructing a spate of one-bedroom units when the demand is for multiple-bedroom units, and at prices detached from reality compounds the housing crisis, erodes confidence in capitalism, and generates completely unnecessary economic and social strife that undermines the efficiency of most major global economies. |
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The City of Toronto was just a hair under 2.5M in 2001, when the new census data is out, it will be expected to be ~3M or just a fraction higher. However, its worth say, that the pace has quickened considerably in the last few years (pre-Covid) with annual growth in the 75,000 range. Your GTA numbers would also be pretty close at ~1.5M Of course, if measuring the Greater Golden Horseshoe (GGH), which is roughly the commuter-shed of Toronto, you get growth of between 2.5M-3M over the period 2001-2021. (we'll have to await the exact census numbers. But the GGH was listed as 7.5M in 2001 and was listed at 10.1M in 2019 by Hemson Consulting working for the Province of Ontario. https://www.hemson.com/wp-content/up...rt-26Aug20.pdf I won't comment on growth elsewhere, as I haven't studied those numbers. **** If you read growth as a percent of base population though, the GGH has grown roughly by 40% over 20 years The City of Toronto by about 20% in the same time period. But something like 9% is in the last 5 years. |
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If a multinational wants to store money away it makes much more sense to invest in US properties, it's cheaper and doesn't have all the foreign regulations like land transfer taxes, foreign buyer taxes and AirBNB isn't as regulated as in Vancouver or Toronto has. Foreign investment of any type is easier in the US than Canada do to less regulations in the US and less taxes |
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Also, is it 5-10% of current homes owned by foreign buyers? 5-10% of new home sales? 5-10% of new capital flowing into the real estate market? Either way though, 5-10% is not that small and can have a significant influence if those buyers lack restraint in terms of how much they're willing to pay to get a foot in the Canadian real estate market. |
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I agree that low interest rates, rapid population growth, and high land values (due to Greenbelt, congestion, and lots of downtown jobs), as well as higher construction costs are also factors that are causing Toronto's real estate to be more expensive than in most American cities. |
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I really can't see any Candian city having more foreign buyers than Americans cities based on all the taxes and regulations when buying property in Canada that the US doesn't have. If foreign buyers make up 5 to 10% of Toronto and Vancouver I would assume it's 15% to 30% on major American cities |
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Canada has better immigration policies than the US so I would think buying property there would be more of a "guarantee" that it could lead to permanent residency. |
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Explain to me how is more housing supply forcing Canadian out of cities which have all been growing in population (ie more Canadian live in our cities than any previous time) Also since we are building more highrises within city centres and less suburbs we are spending less per capita on infrastructure and public services. You whole argument contradicts itself and I don't think you understand what a foreign buyer is |
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But you didn't answer the question about taxes which did seem an odd point on your part. Perhaps you could elaborate. |
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Everyone pays property taxes and other fees in Canada and foreign buyers in some cities have to pay a foreign buyer taxes. My point is in Canada you have much more fees and taxes to pay when buying property than compared to the US and the US would be a better place to store your money in property than Canada. |
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Vancouver has an vacant home tax and a grand total of 787 properties were considered empty in 2019 https://globalnews.ca/news/6523554/e...-results-2019/ |
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The US had a similar program, but it seems like the requirements were stricter and it was only a pathway for possible (rather than guaranteed) permanent residency. It granted around 3500 applications per year a decade ago (barely more than Canada despite 9-10x the population), and I'm not sure how many family members were admitted per investor, nor how many of them were ultimately granted permanent residency. After Canada's program was terminated, US numbers increased to 10,000 applications granted per year in the 2010s. |
Texas apartment rentals are booming, driving up the cost for tenants in Houston
https://www.houstonpublicmedia.org/a...double-digits/ Quote:
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More important to the conversation is how much new or poorly allocated new housing is being delivered relative to population growth in cities. |
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