BC Government Drowns Out Housing Critics; Party Rolls On
There seems to be a little confusion surrounding the objectives of Christy Clark and the BC Government. Just last week Christy Clark added Fuel to the Fire by creating more demand in the market by introducing interest and payment free down payments for first time buyers. Of course this comes just 3 months after she tanked the market with her foreign buyers tax. So what are their objectives? To cool the market, or keep the music playing? Prior to the introduction of the foreign buyers tax the BC Government’s Mike De Jong and Christy Clark totally downplayed the role of foreign buyers driving up Vancouver real estate prices. Here’s an expert from an interview in May, 2016. “There is a perception that foreign investors and speculators are driving an affordability crisis in residential real estate — particularly in Greater Vancouver. The data we have does not support this perception,” the Finance Ministry analysis said. “However, industry experts estimate that foreign buyers likely make up less than five per cent of home sales activity in Greater Vancouver.” Of course stats showed we did indeed have an issue. Foreign buyers accounted for 13% of all sales across Metro Vancouver and an even more alarming 25% in Richmond, driving up detached house prices 80% in three years. Oops. “There is evidence now that suggests that very wealthy foreign buyers have raised the price, the overall price of housing for people in British Columbia,” she said. “If we are going to put British Columbians first and that is what we’re intending to do, we need to make sure that we do everything that we can to try and keep houses affordable and to try and make sure that those very wealthy foreign buyers find it a little bit harder to buy a house in the Greater Vancouver area.” -Christy Clark Queue the foreign buyers tax which immediately slams the brakes on the real estate gravy train. “When I see the new numbers and they tell us that we’ve slowed down the rate increase or the price increase for housing I say good, because that’s what we were trying to do… The prices were going up way too fast, and if we have helped slow that down that’s good, I think that’s what British Columbians were counting on us to do.” The foreign buyers tax did more than just slow the market. Detached prices have fallen 15-20%, sales down 50% year over year. Condo sales fall 22%, townhouse sales 40%. A huge concern for the BC economy and developers who have started building a record number of housing.
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