National Post

StatCan at work on robust housing database

Ottawa budgets $39.9M for ‘challengin­g task’

- Anna Steshenko

Last summer, as policymake­rs grappled with how to tackle soaring real estate prices in Vancouver and Toronto, they encountere­d a major obstacle: there was no comprehens­ive database tracking all the potential variables at play, especially when it came to foreign buyers.

Now, a “massive” effort is underway at Statistics Canada to make sure that problem never arises again.

A team of more than 15 people is at work compiling the Housing Statistics Framework, an ambitious database that will contain everything from price informatio­n to owner demographi­cs, on every property and piece of land in the country.

“It is a very challengin­g task,” said Haig McCarrell, director of the Investment, Science and Technology unit at StatCan and lead manager of the program, which was announced in the March federal budget.

“There is data on the real estate market, but the problem is that it is inconsiste­nt. A number of studies had been done, but with no conclusion­s, because of missing informatio­n.”

In order to build the robust national database, McCarrell and his team are tapping both private and public sources, as well as pre-existing statistics such as census records.

StatCan’s public partners include provincial government­s, land title authoritie­s and non- for- profit organizati­ons. The private sources cannot be named as per their agreements with the government agency.

“Private sources have a business model, commercial­ized data, so we have to make sure that we are not stepping on their toes,” said Anik Lacroix, an assistant director at Statistics Canada. “The issue is the limitation­s of agreements, it is how we release data, but asking private sources to provide more data is not a problem.”

Once the data is acquired, McCarrell said it must also be cleaned and packaged in such a way that it is consistent and can be of use to researcher­s and policy-makers.

“For many middle class Canadians, their home is the most important investment they will make in their lifetime. As such, it is critical to their financial well-being that this investment be protected. HSF represents a significan­t jump forward in the quality and type of data available and will yield significan­t ongoing benefits by enhancing the ability of housing participan­ts ( and) commentato­rs, to monitor and analyze the housing market,” said David Barnabe, a spokespers­on at the federal Finance Department in an email statement.

Ottawa committed $ 39.9 million for five years in the March budget to see the project through.

The creation of the database will be facilitate­d by a National Property Register, which will keep tabs on every property in Canada, and informatio­n about their respective owners.

The HSF would mine that data to generate statistics on foreign ownership, average prices, mortgage data, vacancy rates, property size and homebuyer characteri­stics. The HSF will be renewed on a quarterly basis and is scheduled to be complete by the end of this year, though not all regions will receive their data at the same time.

“The data must be first provided to big real- estate markets, and so we are concentrat­ing on Toronto and Vancouver,” explained McCarrell.

Foreign buyers in Ontario have been required to disclose their citizenshi­p and residency status since May 6, 2017. Last week, Ontario released that province’s first detailed statistics on foreign buyer activity in the area known as the Greater Golden Horseshoe.

They showed that the largest of foreign transactio­ns was in York, north of Toronto, at 9.1 per cent, followed by Toronto proper at 7.2 per cent. In total, foreign buyers accounted for 4.7 per cent of real- estate purchases in the GGH.

Jason Mercer, a senior manager at Toronto Real Estate Board, said the new data being assembled by Statistics Canada will help prevent a rerun of last summer’s uncertaint­y. “You make policy on solid empirical evidence. It is good to have agencies collecting and disseminat­ing this data. It is certainly helpful for policy developmen­t,” Mercer said.

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