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Canada's federal budget set to allocate billions to tackle housing crisis, says minister

Published 2024-03-18, 02:50 p/m
Updated 2024-03-18, 02:50 p/m
© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: A for sale sign is displayed outside a home in Toronto, Ontario in Toronto, Ontario, Canada December 13, 2021.  REUTERS/Carlos Osorio/File Photo

By Promit Mukherjee

OTTAWA (Reuters) - Canada's federal budget, due next month, is likely to allocate billions of dollars for investing in building homes and low cost housing programs, Housing Minister Sean Fraser said on Monday.

Canada faces a housing affordability crisis as a rapidly increasing immigrant population has far outpaced the number of available homes.

Stubbornly high inflation and interest rates at their highest in 22 years have also driven up rent and mortgage costs.

"I don't want to necessarily preview what's going to be revealed in the upcoming federal budget, but there needs to be very substantial investments (for housing)," Fraser told the media on the sidelines of a housing conference in Ottawa.

The expenditure will cover building homes and also support for low cost housing programs, Fraser said.

"When we put those low cost financing programs on the table, we are talking about billions, sometimes tens of billions of dollars to help support the construction of new homes," he said, without specifying if all will be part of the federal budget announcement or mentioning precise figures.

"So, this has got to be a substantial level of investment with the combined direct spend and financing program and certainly total of billions of dollars."

Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland is expected to present her budget in the Parliament on April 16.

As housing affordability emerges as a hot-button issue ahead of next year's election, Conservative Party leader Pierre Poilievre, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's main opponent, has blamed the Liberal government for the crisis.

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The government has responded with a series of measures to boost supply over the last year, but it has said they will not provide immediate relief.

To keep pace with the rising population, Canada needs to build 315,000 new residences every year between now and 2030, or more than a third above the pace of current housing completions, according to Robert Hogue, assistant chief economist at RBC (TSX:RY).

 

 

Latest comments

They know what they're doing. They've already created the problem now they're trying to solve it without addressing the cause: high immigration and housing supply restrictions. because they know if they were to actually let housing prices crash (they have to) they'd look bad politically. This is pure evil
Big mistake. The governments job is to create the economic environment that corresponds to the growth needs of the country. Their current action will not solve the real problem. It will only put them on the hook for more and more subsidies for housing. The Liberal solution of throwing cash at the problems in Canada has never worked, yet they continue the same mistake.
They know what they're doing. Like you said their job is not to interfere. But they've already created the problem now they're trying to solve it without addressing the cause: high immigration and housing supply restrictions. because they know if they were to actually let housing prices crash (they have to) they'd look bad politically.
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