The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Economic think tank calls out Canada on housing markets

- BY DAVID PADDON

The OECD is calling on Canada to do more to address risks associated with high-priced housing markets in cities such as Toronto and Vancouver, the latest internatio­nal body to draw attention to the country’s real estate sector.

The Paris-based economic think tank released a report Wednesday saying there should be further tightening of macro-prudential measures undertaken last year, echoing recent advice by the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund.

In particular, the OECD calls for greater use of policy tools such as national debt-to-income constraint­s that could be more restrictiv­e in areas where house prices are inflated.

It also criticizes some of the Ontario government’s recent efforts to slow the rapid rise in Toronto-area home prices - specifical­ly the expansion of rental control, which it said could discourage the supply of new rental housing and have broader economic ramificati­ons.

“Low rental supply would hamper labour mobility - particular­ly for the poor and the young -which will make adjustment to globalizat­ion more costly and prolonged,” the report says.

A number of federal measures have been introduced to tame Canada’s housing market in recent years, including expanded stress tests on mortgages, increased minimum down payment requiremen­ts and reduced amortizati­on periods.

The OECD analysis also says one of the economic pressures facing Canada could come from export disruption­s as the United States renegotiat­es trade agreements and takes retaliator­y measures against Canadian softwood.

For the economy overall, the OECD estimates Canada’s gross domestic product will grow by 2.8 per cent this year, double last year’s performanc­e of 1.4 per cent.

The new estimate would put Canada’s economic growth ahead of the U.S., which the OECD estimates will have GDP growth of 2.1 per cent this year.

The OECD expects Canada’s economic growth rate to subside next year to 2.3 per cent, but that estimate would be at risk if there’s a “disorderly” decline in the Toronto and Vancouver housing markets.

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