The Niagara Falls Review

Ontario making progress: Morneau

Feds applaud plan to cool Toronto’s housing market

- ALEXANDER PANETTA New York Times

THE CANADIAN PRESS

WASHINGTON — The federal government welcomes Ontario’s move to tax foreign home buyers in and around Toronto, but says it won’t be replicated on a national level because it’s unnecessar­y in the vast majority of the country.

Finance Minister Bill Morneau said his government was consulted in advance of the move by the Ontario government, which announced a 15-per-cent tax on foreign purchases in the hope of cooling a scorching-hot Toronto housing market.

It was one of multiple moves announced this week as part of a housing plan that replicates Vancouver’s foreign-purchase tax, expands rent control, allows municipali­ties to tax vacant properties and creates new layers of scrutiny for speculativ­e purchases.

“There was nothing that surprised us in their announceme­nt. We had discussed in broad strokes the measures they were moving forward with,” Morneau said Friday during a visit to Washington.

“The measures around trying to reduce speculatio­n in the market, we think, are positive ... We do believe there’s an important issue around psychology in the market that needs to be addressed — and Ontario is making progress.”

This week’s announceme­nt generated considerab­le internatio­nal media attention, with headlines from outlets such as the BBC and the about the Canadian city’s effort to cool its housing market.

But, Morneau is adamant: There will be no similar plan at a national level.

That’s because the conditions that drove Toronto home prices up more than one-third in a year to an average value above $1 million simply don’t exist in most places.

“We have very different markets in different parts of the country. So the measures being taken are dealing with specific market conditions in places like Toronto and Vancouver,” Morneau said.

“That’s why we have not even considered these measures federally.”

Morneau made the remarks during a roundtable interview alongside global financial meetings in Washington.

Later Friday, he was to join Mexico’s finance minister at the NHL playoff game between the Toronto Maple Leafs and the Washington Capitals.

Sousa can’t say if tax will affect housing market

Ontario’s finance minister can’t say whether a tax on foreign buyers — a centrepiec­e of his new package of housing measures — will have an effect on the red-hot Greater Toronto Area market.

When asked what data the decision to implement such a tax was based on, Charles Sousa cited a November 2016 Toronto Real Estate Board survey that suggested foreign buyers were involved in about five per cent of purchases.

The board said that shows the amount of foreign buying in the Greater Toronto Area is minimal and not detrimenta­l to the housing market.

Sousa says the question now is will the government’s foreign buyer tax have an effect.

Ontario started collecting citizenshi­p data on home purchases this week, and Sousa says now the government will assess what impact foreign investment is having.

In the Greater Toronto Area, the average price of detached houses rose to $1.21 million last month, up 33.4 per cent from a year ago.

 ?? CHRIS YOU/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Federal Finance Minister Bill Morneau speaks to the media after talks on housing market in the Greater Toronto Area with Ontario Finance Minister Charles Sousa and Toronto Mayor John Tory in Toronto on Tuesday.
CHRIS YOU/THE CANADIAN PRESS Federal Finance Minister Bill Morneau speaks to the media after talks on housing market in the Greater Toronto Area with Ontario Finance Minister Charles Sousa and Toronto Mayor John Tory in Toronto on Tuesday.

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