Federal Liberals Take A Big Step Towards Making Homes More Affordable

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Published 2024-03-26
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Today, I discuss a recent Liberal federal government announcement that targets for non-permanent residents are being lowered - a change in approach to our housing crisis that will have an impact.

See my full article with charts on this topic here: www.movesmartly.com/articles/federal-liberals-take…

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All Comments (21)
  • @user-vi8ci2bi6b
    High population growth not only puts upward pressure on housing costs, but also puts downward pressure on wage growth.
  • This means 480,000 people will have to go home within the next 5 years. Or they can just become permanent residents to get out of the targeted group, which is what's more likely to happen to them given they have 5 years to become PRs.
  • @Michael-pg7rv
    Hopefully they also start focusing on the quality of immigrants they are allowing in to meet the needs of Canada. Like health care workers and skilled trade.
  • @gems.studio5571
    There is an "easy solution" for this non-permanent residents issue (and that's what the government is going to do). They will turn hundreds of thousands non-permanent to permanent residents, by processing their applications for Stream-A & Stream-B applicants. Thousand of people on this "Safeboat" program have already fulfilled all the requirements - and waited for over 10 months for a response for their applications as landed immigrants...
  • @joeflake5829
    John, did they threaten you with an audit or something? I normally agree with you, and while this is better than doing nothing, this is just window dressing that will do very little. It may slow the numbers, but not improve things, at least not for decades, if ever. Last year the real number of newcomers was around 2.2 million, which broke down to 500k permanent residents, 660k temporary workers, 900k students, and about 144k people illegally entering the country. To get to the 300k number you mentioned, we would need to drop this combined number by about 86%, which we know is not happening. If they are holding you against your will, just send a signal next video, sneeze 3 times or something. All the best.
  • @user-kv4kp4co1r
    The influx of temporary residents, including students, led to a significant surge in the housing Market. However, the current trend of escalating mortgage costs and a declining number of these temporary residents is likely to pop this housing bubble.
  • @baseline6786
    Non perm will reduce pressures on inflation. Food. Restaurants. Clothing. Housing maybe a bit on the rental side.
  • @747-pilot
    Sorry, have to disagree with you on this. This is going to have a VERY NEGLIGIBLE impact on the housing market. It’s not as simple as just saying there’s going to be a cap or reduction in “non-permanent” residents! First off, this is being implemented over a FIVE year period, which makes zero sense! Most of these so called “non-permanent” residents are going to transition to Permanent Resident (PR) status. I know the Canadian immigration quite well and how insanely easy it is to gain Canadian permanent residency, compared to say the United States! I’m originally from the US and went through this process myself, and recently got my Canadian citizenship. So I should know a thing or two about Canadian immigration, and the loopholes the size of Texas, that exist to “game the system”.
  • @larkhallman
    Wishful thinking . But in reality not accurate.
  • @Jo-mf2vu
    I've seen other modelling that has projected annual population growth be even lower. 240,000 for 2025 - 2027. This is a massive change to the narrative, especially as population growth was the only reason left to justify rising real estate prices. Every day I hear adds on the radio talking about millions of immigrants coming and RE prices skyrocketing, now that argument is gone.
  • @akdomun
    John, this is not massive at all. They are reducing the percentage portion of a growing population, so the net effect is negligible.
  • @mediaburn2
    Every time I read a new housing headline... "is this the black swan event that will crash the Canadian RE market?" maybe?
  • @mahanrazagh
    Is this April's fool? putting a 20% cap on the current record-high nonpermanent residents makes the homes more affordable?!!