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British Columbians overwhelmingly favour the provincial foreign buyer tax and the federal two-year ban on foreign real estate purchases, a new poll shows. But developers, experiencing a bitter downturn, are pushing the government to ditch policies that curb foreign investment. They say they desperately need investors to return to the market.
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According to a recent paper, in the 1980s, the government opened its doors to wealthy migrants with the Business Immigration Program that allowed about 200,000 people, mostly from East Asia, into Canada, until it was shelved in 2012. Instead of spurring entrepreneurial activity, the wealthy migrants invested heavily in property. Meanwhile, they continued to earn most of their income offshore, paying an average annual income tax in Canada of only $1,400
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After much reluctance, the B.C. Liberal government finally responded with a 15 per cent foreign buyer tax in 2016. It was too little, too late for the party, and the next year the NDP took over the government and increased the tax to 20 per cent. They also introduced other demand-side measures, including the speculation and vacancy tax, which requires citizens to declare if they are paying Canadian income tax and if the home is a principal residence.
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There are signs that in the current market downturn, the development community would like to reopen those doors to outside money. Condo marketer Bob Rennie said racism is driving the pushback against foreign investor buying.
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Bob Rennie recently spoke on a real estate industry panel hosted by Postmedia and said he’d been talking to Mark Carney about opening rental housing development to foreign investment. Rennie also said he was opposed to the foreign buyers’ tax from the start, and believed it was a racist policy.
I think it should be a general rule that policymakers should do exactly what real estate developers and realtors oppose. Those groups are a parasite to society.
they don’t have to be parasites. They do have a role but they are out of control. Government regulation should keep greed in check, and yes, it’s not up to real estate businesses to decide that foreign investors can screw up locals.
they don’t have to be parasites
Thwy don’t have to be, but they almost always choose to be.
To be honest, it’s all about incentives. If you shift regulations to make the most incentivized system to be based around the greatest amount of pleasant housing, they would do that. But they didn’t in the early days, and now the strongest forces to prevent such regulations from being implemented are property owners that fear anything that’ll devalue their property that they expect to double in value every ten years, many of whom are betting their entire retirement fund on that outcome.
If regions did something like, say, give a tax break for every housing unit built in every project, you’d get a city with nothing but 50 story studio apartments/condos. Not like this is good, but the theory itself is sound.
It’s not just shifting incentives, but likely stems from capitalism in general. Things get really messy when basic human needs are turned into commodities.
Wait… the tax is still limited to Metro Vancouver?
I know German, Japanese and Indonesian investors who have really screwed up real estate in the Cariboo and Inside Passage. I’ve talked to them about it and they think we’re idiots. They wouldn’t be allowed to do land grabs like they’ve done here in their own countries. And they’re all for keeping other investors out now that they’ve got their own investment properties.
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Its like they want another French Revolution. This is why wealth is a problem, they start getting sloppy and thinking they’re kings
Real estate developers are the minority who want to screw everyone else over.
Build cheaper houses
When they get millionaire investors they build shit they can sell for a premium with like granite counters and shit. I just want a cheap place that I can afford, not 1000 million dollar homes these developers can make a premium off of.
Fire the real estate developers.