B.C. renter sees little in federal budget to put home ownership in reach - Action News
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British Columbia

B.C. renter sees little in federal budget to put home ownership in reach

The federal government has promised to ban foreign purchases of homes for two years, but people familiar with B.C.'s sky-high prices say it is unlikely to cool the market.

Real estate watchers say foreign buyers ban will do little to cool overheated market

Ashley Pirhonen says between rising rental costs, student loans and car payments needed for her commute, she is unable to put money aside to save up for home ownership. (Ashley Pirhonen)

People who study B.C.'s red-hot housing market are skeptical new federal rules announced Thursday will do much to make home ownership more affordable for people in theprovince.

The Liberal governmentmade tackling sky-high housing costs across the country the centrepiece of its 2022 budget plan, with a pledge to double the pace of new home construction, the creation of a tax-sheltered, first-time home buyers saving account and a two-year ban on foreign buyers.

But Ashley Pirhonen, a 30-year-old renter in West Kelowna, says she's not sure any of the changes will move her any closer to home ownership.

"It seems like the [budget] is not geared toward people like me who are not able to actually save to buy a house because our cost of living is so high," she said.

Pirhornencommutes 45-minutes one-way from West Kelowna to her job in Penticton because she isn't able to find a place to live closer to where she works. Between rent, gas and student loan payments, she says, she doesn't have enough money left to put aside to savefor a home.

"When your rent goes up by 50 per cent, it really eats into the amount of money you have left."

Highest rental costs in the country

British Columbia is home to some of the highest rental costs in the country. According to data from rentals.ca, Vancouver and Victoria top the list of unaffordablerentalmarkets with a single-bedroom unit in Vancouver going for an average of $2,239.

Even smaller cities like Kelowna and Prince George have seen costs skyrocket in recent years as vacancy rates drop in almost every major city in the province.

Data from Rentals.ca of the average cost of one- and two-bedroom rental units in Vancouver, Victoria and Calgary, released on March 18, 2022, as part of the National Rent Ranking. (CBC News)

Andy Yan, anurban planner and adjunct professor at Simon Fraser University, said for most people struggling with affordability, the foreign buyers ban was unlikely to make a difference particularly because it includes exemptions for students, refugees and foreign workers, which he said created loopholes for foreign investment to continue make its way into the market.

"The issue in metropolitan Vancouver isn't necessarily foreign buyers, it's foreign money," he said. "I think this is a missing gap."

Tom Davidoff, an associate professor at UBC's Sauder School of Business, said the foreign buyers ban might cool certain sub-marketswhere foreign buying is a factor but was unlikelyto make a larger difference.

Instead, he said the focus should be on taxing people who hold ontosecondary properties that aren't part of the rental market, regardless of their nationality.

A no vacancy sign.
A no vacancy sign in front of a West End Vancouver apartment. Metro Vancouver has some of the highest rental prices and lowest vacancy rates in the country. (David Horemans/CBC)

"Let's compare [a Canadian] who owns a second home in an expensive city to a foreigner who buys an apartment and then rents it out," he said."The foreigner who rents out the apartment isn't really hindering affordability, but the Canadian with the second home is."

In fact, a Statistics Canadareportfound that less than five per cent of homes in Vancouver were owned by non-residents.

Prihonen pointed out that, for the most part, foreign ownership didn't seem to be the issue preventing her from finding a place to live instead it was a lack of affordable housing supply.

"It really seems the foreign buyers are buying more luxury properties rather than starter homes," she said. "We're not really in the same market."

To that end, the budget has set aside around $10 billion across various initiatives to increase housing stock across the country.

That includes $4 billion for a housingaccelerator fund to create up to 100,000 new units over five years.

A houing co-op in the Champlain Heights neighbourhood of Vancouver, British Columbia is pictured on Wednesday, February 23, 2022.
The federal government is investing in initiatives to build new housing units countrywide, including co-operative housing in which people share ownership of a single property. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

But Tsur Somerville with the Real Estate Foundation of B.C. points out that means there's only $40,000 of investment per unit, which he doesn't expect will translate to new housing.

Jill Atkey of the B.C. Non-Profit Housing Association warned the investment may only translate to about 1,000 new units in B.C. at a time when the low-end rental market is rapidly disappearing.

"For every new unit that the federal government is investing in, we're losing 15 units across the country," she said.

One area that did receive praise was the government's promise to introduce a Home Buyer's Bill of Rights that would include a ban on the practice of forcing potential home buyers to make an offer on a property without knowing what others are bidding.

"This opportunity is well timed and well suited for our market," said Jeff King, CEO of the Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver,in a newsrelease this week.

With files from Pete Evans, Rafferty Baker and Jon Hernandez