The Telegram (St. John's)

Trudeau pledges to tax foreign speculatio­n in housing market

- KELSEY JOHNSON

OTTAWA - Canada’s ruling Liberals will introduce a 1% tax on non-resident non-canadians to help prevent foreign speculatio­n from driving up housing prices, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said on Thursday on the second day of an election campaign.

Speaking at an announceme­nt in Victoria, British Columbia, Trudeau said the national speculatio­n and vacancy tax would apply nationwide and would not affect Canadians living abroad.

Politician­s are crisscross­ing the country after Trudeau formally kicked off a campaign on Wednesday, and a major issue is expected to be the mounting cost of living. Canadians head to the polls on Oct. 21.

The proposed new measure would model a 2 per cent speculatio­n tax that British Columbia imposes on the assessed home value for foreign owners to curb the rising price of housing.

“We have seen from British Columbia's example that even a modest tax can have a significan­t impact on foreign speculatio­n in housing markets,” Trudeau said. He acknowledg­ed that the tax had pushed investment capital to other parts of the country.

“That is why we feel it is important to create a national measure right across the country based on British Columbia’s success with it, to ensure foreign speculatio­n doesn’t make housing less affordable for Canadians,” he said.

In 2017, the Ontario government imposed a 15 per cent non-resident speculatio­n tax on residentia­l property located in and around Toronto in an effort to cool off the city's red-hot housing market.

 ?? REUTERS/JENNIFER GAUTHIER ?? Prime Minister Justin Trudeau speaks with Liberal party supporters and volunteers after launching the election campaign at a rally in Vancouver, B.C., Wednesday.
REUTERS/JENNIFER GAUTHIER Prime Minister Justin Trudeau speaks with Liberal party supporters and volunteers after launching the election campaign at a rally in Vancouver, B.C., Wednesday.

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