Canada Welcomes the New Year by Banning Foreign Home Ownership
Taxes and bans on foreign home ownership haven't arrested home price increases where they've been tried. There's no reason to think Canada's policy will be more successful.

The Canadian government is welcoming the New Year by giving foreigners the cold shoulder. On Sunday, a new law went into effect banning noncitizens, nonpermanent residents, and foreign corporations from buying homes and condos in the country.
It's a fulfillment of Liberal Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's campaign trail promise to combat the allegedly rampant real estate speculation that's driving up home prices for ordinary Canadians.
"The desirability of Canadian homes is attracting profiteers, wealthy corporations, and foreign investors," said the Liberal Party's campaign website last year, noted CNN. "Homes are for people, not investors."
The policy was later folded into the government's budget proposal in April 2022. "We will make sure that houses are being used as homes, rather than as commodities to be traded," said Chrystia Freeland, Canada's finance minister, at the time.
It's certainly true Canada has some of the most unaffordable housing prices in the developed world. Average home prices are ten times average incomes. Compare that to the U.S., where median home prices are 4.3 times median incomes, per National Association of Realtors' data. OECD figures show that Canadian home prices have grown 43 percent faster than incomes since 2015.
And as homes have gotten more expensive, foreign homebuyers have become an increasingly popular scapegoat.
All three major political parties in Canada have endorsed efforts to limit non-Canadian home purchases. The Liberals and Conservatives both endorsed the ban that is now in effect. The left-wing New Democrats suggested a hefty tax on foreign purchases.
The idea behind the policy is that by reducing foreigners' housing demand, there will be more supply at more affordable prices for native Canadians. (Permanent residents and refugees are also exempted from the ban.)
The evidence suggests the effects of the new policy will be limited.
For starters, foreign buyers make up only 5 percent of homeowners in the country. Squeezing out such a marginal part of the market probably won't have a huge effect on prices.
Foreign buyers made up around 4 percent of New Zealand's housing market when the country implemented a ban on nonnative buyers in 2018. Home price growth continued unabated after the ban.
A heavy tax on foreign home purchases in British Columbia has managed to reduce "foreign-related" purchases from 10 percent of all sales to between 1 to 2 percent. One study of the policy showed it reduced home price growth by 1 percent, and that minimal benefit faded after a few months.
Such are the pitfalls of trying to marginally curb demand in a hot market without enough supply. Behind every eliminated foreign buyer are multiple domestic home purchasers competing over an insufficient stock of homes.
Canada's national housing finance agency estimates the country will be short some 3.5 million homes by the end of the decade. That's within spitting distance of the U.S.'s own estimated shortage of 4 million homes—a country with nearly ten times Canada's population.
The country has all the limits on supply that the U.S. does, including density restrictions in the urban core and growth boundaries on the exurban fringe. Both prevent new housing from being built to meet demand. As a result, prices in the country stay stubbornly high.
Canada's local and provincial governments are starting to address this problem with proposals to loosen zoning restrictions. Done right, that will unleash developers' ability to add much-needed supply.
At the federal level, it appears more politically practical to run with unproductive bans and to scapegoat foreigners.
Rent Free is a weekly newsletter from Christian Britschgi on urbanism and the fight for less regulation, more housing, more property rights, and more freedom in America's cities.
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Consistency would be nice. Apples and oranges are both nice, but not on opposite sides of a comparison.
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Speaking of news that's too local.
Trigger warning: Reason contributor, Brendan O'Neill
The walls just keep closing in...
I think Democrats would be doing the GOP a favor if they ban Trump. That has nothing to do with whether Trump would be a decent president, and everything with the fact that DeSantis is likely going to be much smoother sailing in 2024.
Not with fortified elections he's not.
Republicans need to do some fortifying of their own: harvest ballots from the homeless, from retirement homes, from memory care centers, etc.
The DNC already is sending me texts daily asking for money. The RNC is silent. That's why the GOP has such problems: no organization, nothing.
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"allegedly rampant real estate speculation that's driving up home prices"
Right. Has zero to do with unprecedented "money" creation and government spending. Keep moving. Nothing to see here.
They did Something. Something that may not do much to solve the actual problem, but get Canadians off the political class's back and blaming a convenient scapegoat and only harms nonvoters. It is a win all around.
Each previous intervention begets more interventions.
It's amazing how many people cannot see that the purpose of all political interventions is to create opportunities for further interventions. Solving problems is the last thing politicians want to do.
Incentives really do matter.
Politicians have one job, and that's to get elected. They don't look beyond the next election. So I think you're giving them too much credit, since the further interventions will likely happen after the election.
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But "we need [an intervention] to fix this" makes a great campaign slogan.
Right. But that's to fix the consequences of fuckups made by someone who has likely move on to higher office.
Much of the intervention is driven by career bureaucrats. The only role for elected officials is to vote them ever more money and power.
The pattern is: government policy and poor regulation cause a crisis. The government publicly and violently searches for culprits, aided by the MSM, and names the wrong parties--usually in the private sector. The government then rolls out a massive new law and its regulatory children to "fix" the problem as they defined it. The new law doesn't solve the real problem, costs a lot, and has massive unintended consequences, including setting the stage for the next crisis, which will be bigger and more damaging.
Memory of the past crisis fades and everybody reluctantly adjusts to the massive new regulatory overhead. A new criris occurs. The government publicly and violently searches for the culprits, aided by the MSM--looking exclusively in the business community...and so it goes.
Remember, in progressive "economics", concepts like supply, prices, money, spending, income, taxes, etc. are purely political factors that have no mathematical connections.
Canada's national housing finance agency estimates the country will be short some 3.5 million homes by the end of the decade.
Perhaps they might continue to ramp up that assisted suicide pogrom they have going there.
I'm always mystified when a government agency declares that society has been/is/will be "short" of something as if it were a weatherman forecasting the rain and not a beaver trying to figure out where all the river water went.
You would think that building and selling expensive homes to never-present foreigners, along with associated high taxes paid by people who don't use most municipal services (and can't vote), would appeal to fascists.
Yes, I don't understand (well, eh, I do, but you know ...) this idea that someone will buy a house and do nothing with it. If they've got the kind of money that can afford to buy a house and leave it empty except for a week or two vacation several times a year, paying all the taxes, paying for upkeep ... who are they hurting? If they rent it out on AirBnb the rest of the time, is that not useful too? If they buy it as a rental investment, is that not useful?
Reminds me of that crazy Seattle law, which I think got smacked down, that forced home owners to rent out spare rooms.
There is a certain class of people which is gripped by the delusion that Scrooge McDuck is not just a cartoon character, but a real person, and that all the evils of the world are caused by his miserly desire to own all the money (and do nothing with it). He raison d'etre to buy things which people want and then simply hoard them out of spite, to his own detriment, just so that he can cackle at the misery of poor people who must now do without whatever it is.
Most people think of money, income and wealth as synonyms. So they see someone worth X dollars and figure they have X dollars in the bank. They don't understand that wealth is valued in dollars, but it isn't dollars. Or they see someone with Y income and figure that makes them rich or poor, when that only represents what they earned in a given year instead of what wealth they accumulated over their lives.
Such people are very susceptible to manipulation by politicians and pundits who take advantage of that ignorance.
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Ditto confusing revenue with profit. "Greedcorp made 8 bazillion dollars last year, but paid zero income taxes!!!!" Well, actually Greedcorp SOLD 8 bazillion dollars worth of stuff to people who gladly parted with the cash in exchange for it, but because their costs were so high because of stupid trade policies and sky-high "minimum" wages, and because they lost so much money last year that gets carried forward to this year, they actually didn't MAKE any money at all, so they didn't pay any income taxes on income that wasn't there.
And likewise for people who don't distinguish between profits and profit margins. Ignorant people screamed about higher profits for grocery stores during the pandemic, as if those greedy bastard grocers were gouging hapless consumers. But anyone who looked a little closer could see that increased profits were due almost entirely to larger volumes of sales, while profit margins remained razor thin. Given all the disruptions to supply chains, my hat's off to grocers for managing to keep anything at all on the shelf.
In areas where there are restrictions on building new housing, they are hurting people who live there and just want a home. It's ridiculous that permanent residents have difficulty finding a home in Vancouver while Chinese tourists own large homes they by for vacations or investments.
But the solution is to build more homes. It's not like Canada is running out of room.
... or wood.
Perhaps, but rallying cries like "Canada for the Canadians" usually play well toward getting the fascists elected, and voted more and more power.
Do we at least get to see Castreau Jr. dressed up as Il Dulce?
Considering his preference for black-face, he's more likely to dress up as Idi Amin.
You want Trudeau dressed up as a sweet little Spanish desert?
You're presuming a level of economic understanding that fascists lack.
"The first lesson of economics is scarcity: there is never enough of anything to fully satisfy all those who want it. The first lesson of politics is to disregard the first lesson of economics."
Thomas Sowell
Look, the guy's dad is a famous communist dictator so what do you expect?
It's actually quite astounding just how cool Canadians have been with massive authoritarian behavior by their political leaders and Trudeau in particular.
But we're not. Remember February when Trudeau had to institute martial law?
I do. That's included in my statement when I mentioned authoritarian behavior.
Do you know why Canadians pour oil on their lawns?
To keep their [illegal] pistols from rusting.
Fucking douche; there are just no limits to how much their government can govern; nor, apparently, how much a plurality of Canadians never tire of taking it up the ass, so long as they can feel virtuous about it.
Canadians never tire of taking it up the ass, so long as they can feel virtuous about it.
That's not fair.
We had a rebellion last February that scared they elites so badly that they imposed martial law and seized the bank accounts of anyone who complained.
"Feet on desks or GTFO!" - 'Murica
1. Trudeau has been taking
bribesmarching orders from the Chinese government for quite some time.2. Mom and pop Chinese investors have been hiding their money in Canadian property for some time now.
3. The Chinese government doesn't like that.
Speaking of Canada: remember when Trudeau froze the bank accounts of some peaceful protesters and all the supposed anti fascists here in the USA were either 1) silent or 2) defending it?
Good times. Fascism for me but not thee.
That's because the so-called "antifa" are actually the fascist brownshirts. They were the ones pissed that we didn't stay home. They were also the ones out marching and rioting with BLM and the like. They're the brownshirt arm of the Donkey Party.
New Zealand: '...Home price growth continued unabated after the ban....' but no link to any proof is provided. Furthermore, after several years, no one has come forth with any solid evidence that the program failed. There are some who say it's been a modest success. Long term solutions are sealing off borders, reducing population and hours worked, and automating as much as the bottom 25 to 40% of bottom level jobs as possible to increase productivity and standard of living.
Isn't this *exactly* what happened on the "Island of Alphas" in Brave New World right before they all set about murdering each other in an outright civil war and begging for outside intervention to put a stop to it?
House prices continued to rise here until late 2021 when the cutting off of cheap credit started to take effect. The foreigner ban did absolutely nothing.
If wealthy CCP party members want to leave hard assets to their children after manipulating their currency (real estate in U.S., Canada, Australia, New Zealand), China and Hong Kong should allow private land ownership and loose inheritance laws.
Sleep in shifts?
China was buying up too much property. Vancouver was a hot bed. Castro loves the ideology until it impacts his numbers.
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At this point, Canada is basically a fascist country. If you buy real estate there, you're a fool.
But they might get a huge investment from Apple if only they can find some uyghurs.
...maybe government assisted suicide in Canada will keep home prices down?