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How to solve Vancouvers affordable housing crisis

1520 Views 8 Replies 5 Participants Last post by  vanboy2
Basically how do you solve Vancouver's housing crisis? By building raising mortgage rates and requiring drastically higher downpayment requirements like what Singapore and HK is doing? Building HK style 50 storey tower blocks? Or simply imposing some sort of residence requirement for home buyers?
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I'm sure the dude from white rock will start ranting about how the greedy Chinese jack up the local housing price and what not soon. ;)
I can't help but be touched by your affection for me.

The first thing the city and all of metro should do is put a moratorium on the destruction of all houses. Tearing down houses is something that is unique to Vancouver and results in ruined neighbourhoods and higher prices because the home is nothing more than a tear down opportunity.

In some ways its too late for Vancouver to ever be even reasonably affordable again. The city made a conscious decision to become a real estate market and damn the consequences and hence the problems of today. This decision will forever dampen Vancouver's economic outlook for decades to come. The sad reality is that Vancouver will never again become a magnet for emigrants from the rest of the country because the wages are too low and the cost of real estate far too high. In most of the country you are far better off being unemployed than moving to Vancouver for work.

The prices will never again return to historic norms because so much of greater Vancouver housing has been torn down and new houses put up.
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Land reclamation? So was Vancouver a lot cheaper before Expo 86 and how was the city doing in the 70s and the 1st half of the 80s, because even then it was already relatively expensive as a city. Another issue is that Canadian, Australians, and Americans seem to prefer wide open spaces, even for their houses.
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when BC does a la US Subprime mortgage crisis... that's the only way the market will be corrected. :D
a very drastic correction...
Vancouver has, in general, always been relatively pricey compared to other parts of the country. Vancouver, like much of the West, also is far more prone to large swings in the market due to commodities.

Unlike the Western USA, the Canadian West has never really diversified it's economy. There is still no real manufacturing base and nearly all head offices are commodity centers with no banks. Outside of oil there are few corporate offices and none of the 20 largest corporations have their head office in Vancouver, shocking for the nation's 3rd largest city. Western Canada doesn't have the manufacturing base of L.A. or financials and hi-tech of San Fransisco or Seattle. Interestingly the only automotive plant in the West is New Flyer buses in Winnipeg.

Due to the nature of commodities this can bring about huge fluctuations in the economy in very short periods of time. When I was a kid in the late 70s EVERYBODY was moving to Alberta for work and it looked like the good times would never end and needless to say they did and very abruptly. All of this is why housing in the West has always been a very up or down scenario. Again Manitoba, which is the less commodity based economy, never had the severe boom or bust cycle which is reflected it's housing price growth being more in line with inflation.
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Vancouver has, in general, always been relatively pricey compared to other parts of the country. Vancouver, like much of the West, also is far more prone to large swings in the market due to commodities.

Unlike the Western USA, the Canadian West has never really diversified it's economy. There is still no real manufacturing base and nearly all head offices are commodity centers with no banks. Outside of oil there are few corporate offices and none of the 20 largest corporations have their head office in Vancouver, shocking for the nation's 3rd largest city. Western Canada doesn't have the manufacturing base of L.A. or financials and hi-tech of San Fransisco or Seattle. Interestingly the only automotive plant in the West is New Flyer buses in Winnipeg.

Due to the nature of commodities this can bring about huge fluctuations in the economy in very short periods of time. When I was a kid in the late 70s EVERYBODY was moving to Alberta for work and it looked like the good times would never end and needless to say they did and very abruptly. All of this is why housing in the West has always been a very up or down scenario. Again Manitoba, which is the less commodity based economy, never had the severe boom or bust cycle which is reflected it's housing price growth being more in line with inflation.
Vancouvber is pretty much the only city in the West, and has been a transport terminus which was the reason for original idea behind Expo 86.
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^^ How bout Calgary??
as long as Canadian immigration policy remain the same,Vancouver will always a mecca for Asian investors ,well look at the reality here....the weather,the scenery,the short cross of Pacific ocean among many thing... a crisis for a locals but this opportunity never old to any abroad investors.
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