The Niagara Falls Review

Study says rents in most Canadian cities are unaffordab­le

- JORDAN PRESS

OTTAWA — A minimum-wage worker could afford to rent in just a few neighbourh­oods in Canada, suggests a new analysis of the country’s rental market that also raises questions about a promised federal rent-supplement program.

The report released Thursday by the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternativ­es says someone earning minimum wage would only be able to afford a one-bedroom rental in nine per cent of 795 neighbourh­oods in Canadian cities in the study.

The figure drops to three per cent of neighbourh­oods when looking at the affordabil­ity of two-bedroom units.

The federal Liberals’ decadelong national housing strategy includes programs to build more rental housing, hoping a boost in supply will drive down costs.

At the same time, negotiatio­ns with provinces are winding along on the design of a new rent supplement for low-income tenants that will average about $2,500 a year.

Study author David Macdonald said the benefit could provide some short-term help while the country awaits new rental units. But he said the benefit may not be enough for low-income renters to close the affordabil­ity gap.

The report defines “affordable” rent as 30 per cent or less of a renter’s pre-tax income, the same cut-off used by federal officials.

The new portable housing benefit is to roll out next year, which will be tied to a person rather than a unit — meaning the person can carry it with them through the housing market rather than losing the financial help when they move out of a government-supported dwelling. Its design will be tailored to each province.

Spending is set at $4 billion — split among federal and provincial government­s — which will require tough decisions about who gets it, how much they can receive, and when it gets taken away.

“You really have to ration it based on some simple criteria, otherwise you blow through your (spending) cap,” said Macdonald, a senior economist at the centre.

“Second of all, it’s likely not generous enough to substantia­lly reduce the rent for renters, particular­ly at the lower end of the income spectrum and particular­ly in big cities like Vancouver, Toronto, Victoria, Calgary, Ottawa.”

Roughly one-third of households, or 4.7 million, are renters and they are often low-income earners, or young adults, or newcomers to Canada.

Average rents, adjusted for inflation, have increased since the early 1990s as constructi­on of traditiona­l apartments declined in favour of homes and then condos, Macdonald said. In the 1970s, he said, it wasn’t uncommon to see 100,000 new, purpose-built rental units being constructe­d each year, “which is an incredible amount of new rental housing being put into the market.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada