Vancouver Sun

Foreign buyers tax to go under microscope

NDP to study value of measures taken to ease affordabil­ity

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The provincial government is reviewing the foreign buyers’ tax in the Vancouver area and the interest-free loan program to first-time homebuyers to determine whether they’ve been effective in improving affordabil­ity, the province’s new housing minister says.

In an interview Monday, Selina Robinson says she and provincial Finance Minister Carole James will go over real estate transactio­n data in an effort to decide whether such measures should be kept, revised or scrapped altogether.

“I don’t know that we have any plans to eliminate it,” Robinson said of the 15 per cent foreign buyers levy, nearly a year after the previous Liberal government introduced it for Metro Vancouver.

“There’s certainly enough data that would help us to understand its value, and so, we have to look at that data.”

Robinson said she understand­s the tax had some impact early on, but that is starting to slip away.

From June 10 until Aug. 1, 2016 — one day before the tax took effect — 13.2 per cent of all property transfer transactio­ns in Metro Vancouver involved foreign buyers, according to data from the B.C. Finance Ministry. From Aug. 2, 2016, until the end of last year, that figure fell to 2.6 per cent.

In the months after the tax, there were signs of cooling in Vancouver’s housing market, with the number of transactio­ns falling. However, there have been signs that the market may be rebounding, as prices continue to creep up.

The Multiple Listing Service composite benchmark price for all properties in Metro Vancouver was $998,700 in June, an increase of 7.9 per cent from the same month last year, according to the Greater Vancouver Real Estate Board.

Tsur Somerville, the director of the University of British Columbia Centre for Urban Economics and Real Estate, said the tax may have dampened foreign interest in a city where housing prices are among the most expensive in North America.

But another possibilit­y is that some foreign buyers are not selfidenti­fying as such or have shifted to purchasing properties, like presale condominiu­ms, that aren’t covered by the tax, he said.

Before they won the May election, the NDP promised to bring in an annual two per cent tax on vacant properties, but Robinson says that too is under review.

Andrey Pavlov, a professor who specialize­s in real estate finance at Simon Fraser University in Burnaby, said he hopes the government implements policies that would ease developmen­t restrictio­ns to increase housing supply.

“Unless we can increase supply, we can tax people at any rate we want,” Pavlov said.

“It’s not going to make any difference because we just don’t have enough units.”

 ?? DARRYL DYCK/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Housing minister Selina Robinson, with Premier John Horgan in May, says she plans to go over real estate transactio­n data to decide whether measures designed to improve housing affordabil­ity should be kept, revised or scrapped.
DARRYL DYCK/THE CANADIAN PRESS Housing minister Selina Robinson, with Premier John Horgan in May, says she plans to go over real estate transactio­n data to decide whether measures designed to improve housing affordabil­ity should be kept, revised or scrapped.

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