Federal Budget Archives - REM https://realestatemagazine.ca/tag/federal-budget/ Canada’s premier magazine for real estate professionals. Mon, 27 Oct 2025 17:28:16 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.3 https://realestatemagazine.ca/wp-content/uploads/2022/09/cropped-REM-Fav-32x32.png Federal Budget Archives - REM https://realestatemagazine.ca/tag/federal-budget/ 32 32 Ontario housing sector presents united front on supply, affordability https://realestatemagazine.ca/ontario-housing-sector-presents-united-front-on-supply-affordability/ https://realestatemagazine.ca/ontario-housing-sector-presents-united-front-on-supply-affordability/#respond Tue, 28 Oct 2025 09:03:17 +0000 https://realestatemagazine.ca/?p=40791 With the federal budget around the corner, builders, Realtors, business groups, trade associations, not-for-profit organizations and rental providers are demanding action to fix the housing crisis

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The following is a joint statement released on Oct. 27 by members of Ontario’s housing sector, including the Toronto Regional Real Estate Board (TRREB) and Ontario Real Estate Association (OREA).

Ontario is facing a housing emergency. Projects are stalling, builders are cancelling developments and families and individuals are being priced out of the market.

As the provincial and federal governments prepare to release their fall economic statement and budget respectively, our message is urgent: bold, coordinated action is needed to boost housing construction, lower costs and bring affordability back within reach for residents.

Housing is more than just shelter; it’s the foundation of our economy and the heart of our communities. Today, Ontario’s housing sector, from builders, Realtors, business groups, trade associations, not-for-profit organizations and rental providers, speaks with one clear voice. Together with governments at all levels, we must move swiftly to unlock housing supply, cut costs, and restore affordability by accelerating ownership and rental housing delivery.

We acknowledge the positive work done so far by the federal, provincial and municipal governments regarding policy developments, zoning reform and funding programs to encourage more housing construction, including the most recent provincial housing bill, Fighting Delays, Building Faster Act, 2025, which signals the government’s intention to take further practical steps in cutting red tape, lowering construction costs and restoring confidence and investment in the rental housing market by speeding up slow resolution processes to adjudicate landlord and tenant disputes. Other efforts include the Housing Accelerator Fund, the Apartment Construction Loan Program, Build Canada Homes, the Building Ontario Fund, the Municipal Housing Infrastructure Program, reform to end exclusionary zoning and allow as-of-right construction of multi-plexes on single lots and the Building Faster Fund, among other projects. However, more action is still needed.

We also recognize that potential disruptions impacting the housing ecosystem that are outside the direct control of governments and industry, such as trade wars, geopolitical tensions and economic uncertainty, need to be considered as we navigate an uncertain environment at the macro level. 

Housing remains the backbone of Canada’s economy. It supports over 1.2 million jobs and contributes more than $143 billion in economic activity yearly to Canada’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP). However, rising costs, difficult regulatory environments, economic uncertainty and constrained supply have slowed new housing starts and home purchases, putting tens of thousands of skilled trade jobs at risk. This will impact spin-off economic activity in related sectors and push both home ownership and rental housing further out of reach for many residents.

To meet Ontario and Canada’s housing challenge, a united focus on delivery is required. By reducing construction costs, attracting investments and aligning tax policy, zoning and approval systems, governments at all levels can restore confidence, protect jobs and support innovation at the speed and scale Canadians urgently need.

 

Policy priorities for immediate action

 

To restore affordability and confidence in the housing market, we are calling on municipal, provincial and federal governments to work collaboratively with the housing sector by adopting the following measures:

1. Position and profile housing as an economic driver: To ensure housing policy is economic policy, recognize housing construction and trade as a core driver of employment and GDP, adopt a framework to preserve the tremendous job creation that the housing industry generates, and acknowledge that housing unaffordability is also affecting our overall economic productivity, especially in the Greater Toronto Hamilton Area (GTHA).

2. Modernize outdated tax rules: Extend the GST/HST exemption on new homes up to $1.5 million for homebuyers, reflecting current market realities, particularly in major urban centres, and encouraging new construction.

3. Cut costs for homebuyers: Align cost recovery with actual service delivery and housing goals to reduce barriers to construction and costs to homebuyers. Municipalities and provinces need to collaborate with industry to modernize the fee structure applied to new housing, which is currently inflating housing costs and constraining new supply.

4. Build faster through innovation in parallel to traditional building: Support the advent, inclusion and expansion of modern construction methods – including panelized systems, modular building, robotics and other emerging technologies that embrace productivity, reduce costs and construction time, and enable homebuilding at scale. These need to be supported by an innovation policy framework created in partnership with the industry that provides incentives for early adopters and customers of new solutions, as well as investments in Canadian companies providing new solutions. Scaling up pioneering methods should be done in addition to supporting the ongoing innovation and productivity of traditional construction techniques.

5. Free up land and end exclusionary zoning: Act decisively to end outdated zoning restrictions to permit gentle density and a wider mix of housing types, especially missing-middle and multi-unit dwellings in more communities.

6. Incentivize private capital: Encourage programs that incentivize private capital, both investment and philanthropic, for both rental and ownership housing to accelerate market and non-market construction. This should include reintroducing the Multiple Unit Residential Building (MURBS) tax incentive.

The housing sector stands ready to partner with every level of government. Together, we can reignite momentum, rebuild confidence, restore affordability through partnership, innovation and investment, and deliver the homes our communities urgently need.

Signed:

John DiMichele, CEO, Toronto Regional Real Estate Board

Luigi Favaro, CEO, Ontario Real Estate Association

Ene Underwood, CEO, Habitat for Humanity GTA

Michael Brooks, CEO, Real Property Association of Canada

George Carras, CEO, R-LABS Canada

Jonathan Nusbaum, CEO, Terra Modular

Marlon Bray, executive vice president, Clark Construction Management

Tony Irwin, president and CEO, Federation of Rental-housing Providers of Ontario/Rental Housing Canada

Daryl Chong, president and CEO, Greater Toronto Apartment Association

Dave Wilkes, president and CEO, Building Industry and Land Development Association

Kathy Hogeveen, chief of operations, Assembly Corp.

Jude Tersigni, vice president of planning and development, Menkes Developments

Richard Lyall, president, Residential Construction Council of Ontario

Roselle Martino, executive vice president, policy and strategic affairs, Toronto Region Board of Trade

Frank Cairo, co-founder and CEO, Caivan Communities

Nhung Nguyen, CEO, Horizon Legacy

 

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Concerns raised over unintended consequences of federal budget’s impact on rental housing: QRLA https://realestatemagazine.ca/concerns-raised-over-unintended-consequences-of-federal-budgets-impact-on-rental-housing-qrla/ https://realestatemagazine.ca/concerns-raised-over-unintended-consequences-of-federal-budgets-impact-on-rental-housing-qrla/#comments Wed, 22 May 2024 04:01:44 +0000 https://realestatemagazine.ca/?p=31235 Rent increase rules don’t allow landlords to keep up with rising costs, so taking vacancy decontrol away “may trigger an exodus of small landlords”

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Quinte Region Landlords Association (QRLA) members are concerned that some 2024 federal budget proposals may harm their ability to expand rental housing supply. The association represents about 300 housing providers supplying over 2000 rental housing units in the Quinte region.

QRLA president Robert Gentile says the group applauds the government for addressing the rental housing crisis and encouraging supply, but worries some measures may have unintended consequences.

 

Disclosing historical rents: ‘A prelude to removing vacancy decontrol’

 

He notes the requirement to disclose historical rents to new tenants as an example of more red tape on top of an already heavily regulated industry and that, as it is, many landlords leave the industry due to excessive regulations. He says he’s not clear on how historical rent information would be of use to tenants and worries it could be a prelude to removing vacancy decontrol (landlords’ ability to raise rents when a unit becomes vacant).

“Many landlords fall behind financially because the rent increase rules don’t allow them to keep up with rising operating costs. The only chance many landlords have to catch up is when there is a tenant turnover. Take away that ability, and you may trigger an exodus of small landlords who decide rentals aren’t worth the high risk and headaches.”

 

More concerns: Landlord disputes legal fund and capital gains tax

 

The QRLA is also concerned about the proposed Tenant’s Bill of Rights, and the $15 million legal fund to help with landlord disputes. “We have no issues with helping good tenants defend their rights with any bad-apple landlord,” Gentile says, “but what about the many mom-and-pop landlords who face financial ruin at the hands of bad-apple tenants abusing the system? Don’t they also deserve protection so they can keep providing rental housing? Many are not getting that right now.”

He points out that both sides have rights that should be protected, and both sides should expect a justice system that works.

Raising the capital gains tax is another concern the QRLA has, claiming it may act as a disincentive to small landlords investing in rental properties: “Many small landlords do not realize much cash flow owning rentals, and count on the eventual sale to realize a return on their time and risk, often years down the road. Some are counting on their capital gains as their retirement fund. Raising the tax may discourage people from providing rental housing.”

 

Gentile says the QRLA looks forward to dialogue with the federal government through industry partners to better understand the budget and its potential implications on landlords and rental housing supply.

 

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OPINION: Good on paper, but can the 2024 federal budget really break ground on Canada’s housing crisis? https://realestatemagazine.ca/opinion-good-on-paper-but-can-the-2024-federal-budget-really-break-ground-on-canadas-housing-crisis/ https://realestatemagazine.ca/opinion-good-on-paper-but-can-the-2024-federal-budget-really-break-ground-on-canadas-housing-crisis/#respond Wed, 01 May 2024 04:03:05 +0000 https://realestatemagazine.ca/?p=30670 Budget 2024 is encouraging in theory, but the real test will be executing these promises, which needs concrete action from all government levels

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On April 16, Canada’s federal government presented Budget 2024. Leading up to the official unveiling, we knew its contents would be heavily focused on tackling Canada’s housing crisis as several pre-budget announcements revealed billions of dollars in proposed spending to support infrastructure and housing construction — with a focus on purpose-built rental units — in addition to new mortgage amortization rules and renter protection policies.

While the federal government has stepped up its efforts to tackle Canada’s housing crisis, it’s vital that all levels of government across the political spectrum continue to work together to relieve pressure on the country’s over-stressed housing market. 

 

‘Financial carrots’ risk pouring fuel on the fire of demand-supply imbalance 

 

Supply and demand are two sides of the same complicated coin that is the country’s housing crisis. Both deserve attention.

We should, however, approach demand-side policies and financial incentives for buyers with caution. We mustn’t lose focus on the fundamental underlying issue: the country’s dire inventory shortage. 

Initiatives aimed at making it easier for young Canadians to enter the market are welcome, such as increasing the RRSP penalty-free withdrawal limit through the Home Buyers’ Plan, or the new (and impressive) tax-free First Home Savings Account, which can accelerate down payment savings for buyer hopefuls.

These financial carrots do tend to encourage more buyers into the market, however, and can have an inflationary impact on home prices. Put simply, a young buyer may find themselves no farther ahead if home prices leap by an amount equal to or greater than the value of the incentive.  

Policies focused on artificially diminishing buyer demand with a new tax are even more economically troublesome. These attempts to stabilize home prices create a buyer backlog bubble — pent-up demand that is inevitably released into the marketplace in a lumpy fashion, the equivalent of two or more years of demand all at once — causing home prices to spike. 

Without addressing the acute shortage of homes in our country, traditional demand management policies are doomed to fail. 

 

A balanced rental market benefits Canada’s overall housing economy

 

It’s essential to the overall health of Canada’s real estate economy that we create a sustainable, well-oiled rental market system that encourages respect and cooperation between tenants and landlords, as this is often the first step in a young person’s path to home ownership.

The government’s new Renters’ Bill of Rights, which proposes such measures as requiring landlords to disclose a clear history of a unit’s pricing and allowing tenants’ monthly rent payments to count towards their credit score, is a promising advancement in increasing transparency and protecting renters.

Monthly rent costs have gone up materially in recent years, and vacancy rates in Canada’s major cities are near zero. Tax incentives for builders of purpose-built rental buildings aimed at low-income Canadians are an important step. These programs should be extended to builders of middle-priced rental housing as well. Policymakers need to recognize that housing is an ecosystem and to free up properties for low-income Canadians, there must be more move-up options for the people currently living in those units.

Finally, we cannot forget that the most important providers of rental housing in the country are the millions of individual property investors. These entrepreneurial landlords, who are the foundation of affordable housing stock for the roughly one-third of Canadians who are tenants, are a vital piece of the puzzle.

We should be encouraging more small-scale landlords to contribute to Canada’s rental housing inventory in an effort to alleviate some pressure from the highly competitive market. The proposed low-cost loans for homeowners to add a secondary suite to their properties could be a positive step in the right direction.

 

Canada still needs more ‘missing middle’ housing inventory

 

Focus recently has shifted to incenting the rapid construction of more homes, which is the solution needed to address our housing affordability challenges. With more than two-thirds of Canadians already homeowners, and many more who desire to own their own property, it’s encouraging to see the federal government committed to helping get more shovels in the ground. If Canada’s population continues to grow at a robust pace, we’ll have to significantly increase the number of homes we’re building to keep up.

While offering incentives for the development of purpose-built rental buildings addresses one issue, it highlights another: Canada’s desperate need for housing stock for middle-income, move-up buyers. There’s a severe lack of inventory available for young Canadians looking to trade in their condominiums for a home suitable for a growing family.

Though much of the 2024 budget focuses on creating much-needed rental accommodations, we cannot overlook the importance of building a variety of housing options that serve the growing cohort of Canadians who require single-family housing.

 

While the policies proposed in the 2024 federal budget present some encouraging solutions on paper, the real test will be whether or not policymakers can execute these promises. Making significant strides toward resolving Canada’s housing crisis will require concrete action from all levels of government.

 

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