National Post (National Edition)

Ontario urging feds to revise tax rules

- ALEXANDRA POSADZKI The Canadian Press

TORONTO • Ontario Finance Minister Charles Sousa is urging Ottawa to address speculativ­e investing in the country’s housing markets by changing how such profits are taxed.

Currently, a capital-gains tax is charged on 50 per cent of the profits on the sale of a home unless the property qualifies for a principal residence exemption.

In a letter to federal Finance Minister Bill Morneau dated Friday, Sousa says that boosting the taxable amount above 50 per cent could reduce the incentive for people to purchase homes on speculatio­n.

Morneau is set to release his latest budget on Wednesday amid speculatio­n that the Liberals may increase the capital gains tax.

Jack Mintz, a tax policy expert at the University of Calgary, says that doing so could harm innovation by discouragi­ng people from making risky investment­s. Mintz also noted that increasing the capital gains tax charged on homes may not have a big impact on speculativ­e activity.

“Will it stop speculatio­n? I’m not sure,” says Mintz. “It may not entirely change it.”

Speculativ­e investing in the real estate market — buying a home in the hope of turning a profit rather than to live in — is believed to be one of the culprits behind soaring house prices in certain markets, particular­ly in Toronto, Vancouver and their surroundin­g areas.

A TD Bank report published Monday says that the combinatio­n of strong demand for homes and the lack of available supply have created the “perfect eco-climate” for speculator­s.

“The continued escalation in home prices may have generated a greater tendency towards flipping homes for a profit,” the report by TD economists Beata Caranci, Diana Petramala and Katherine Judge says.

Sousa says curbing speculativ­e real estate purchases could help address dwindling housing affordabil­ity so that first-time buyers are able to get into the market, while also generating tax revenue to put toward other housing affordabil­ity initiative­s.

“My primary focus is to address the concerns of middleclas­s Canadians who are worried about buying their first home,” Sousa says in his letter.

“Additional­ly, it is important that the housing market remains stable, meaning that borrowers and lenders are resilient and able to withstand economic shocks.”

Sousa has also floated the idea of implementi­ng a tax on foreign buyers, similar to the one that the B.C. government introduced in Vancouver last summer, in a bid to cool the red-hot real estate market in Canada’s largest city.

However, the Toronto Real Estate Board opposes the idea, saying it would do little to curb rising home prices.

When asked Monday if the foreign buyer tax was still on the table, Sousa emphasized that the government is considerin­g myriad options to tackle housing affordabil­ity.

“We are looking at a number of opportunit­ies, a number of options,” Sousa said.

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