Regina Leader-Post

PST rebate for new home purchases

Building industry welcomes stimulus

- PHIL TANK

SASKATOON Saskatchew­an’s struggling homebuildi­ng industry is getting some relief from the provincial government.

The province’s spending update tabled Wednesday included a provincial sales tax (PST) rebate for part of the value of new home sales.

The rebate will cover up to 42 per cent of the contract for a new house with a value of up to $350,000, not including land.

The new initiative will kick in for homes purchased starting April 1 and continue for the next three years.

Finance Minister Donna Harpauer told reporters on Wednesday she worked closely with the chief executives of the home builders’ associatio­ns in Regina and Saskatoon in crafting the rebate.

“This was a proposal that they came forward (with) that I thought was doable in our fiscal situation at that time,” Harpauer said. “And I was viewing it more from the affordabil­ity side because the (federal mortgage) stress test was eliminatin­g certain people from qualifying for their down payment.

“Now I’m viewing it, quite frankly, as an economic stimulus.”

Harpauer said she thought restrictio­ns at the federal level, known as the mortgage “stress test,” which was introduced in 2018, were having a more severe effect on the homebuildi­ng industry.

The Saskatchew­an Party government started charging the six per cent PST on home constructi­on in 2017 to address a revenue shortfall.

“This is a very welcome tool for our sector,” said Chris Guerette, CEO of the Saskatoon and Region Home Builders Associatio­n.

Guerette called the province’s homebuildi­ng sector a “significan­tly underperfo­rming industry” in the province.

In 2018, Saskatchew­an’s homebuildi­ng industry was valued at $3.5 billion in investment and $1.7 billion in wages and accounted for 26,500 jobs, Guerette said.

“We need to do something if we wanted to have an industry that is responding to growth. It’s a phenomenal job-creating industry.”

Guerette said projection­s on how the initiative will affect the industry are difficult right now due to the uncertaint­y created by the COVID-19 pandemic.

While housing starts have increased in the first two months of this year compared to 2019, Guerette said her associatio­n prefers to look at permits, which she said provides a better indication of the industry’s health.

Guerette said permits were down in January 2020 compared with January 2019.

According to Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporatio­n numbers, 369 new homes were started in Saskatchew­an in the first two months of this year, compared to 211 in the same period in 2019.

Mark Cooper, president of the Saskatchew­an Constructi­on Associatio­n, welcomed Harpauer’s announceme­nts in a statement posted on the associatio­n’s website and called the PST rebate “incredibly welcome news.”

Cooper said the initiative­s “will give a jolt of confidence to our industry and Saskatchew­an’s economy as a whole as we deal with the COVID-19 crisis and look to the days beyond it.”

The provincial government backed away from its plan to present a complete budget on Wednesday and instead announced spending estimates without revenue projection­s due to efforts to contain the spread of the COVID -19 coronaviru­s.

The provincial government also announced a new tax incentive to help encourage the building and expansion of oil pipelines. The Oil Infrastruc­ture Investment Program is intended to support the constructi­on and expansion of pipelines and terminals.

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