We just might need all those new condos, CIBC economists say
TORONTO — Are we really overbuilding, constructing too many condominiums and creating too much sprawl? A new report maintains we need that housing more than ever.
Benjamin Tal, deputy chief economist with Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce, says we might be substantially underestimating household formation because we are not factoring in up to 100,000 immigrants.
“Ask any real estate developer in any of Canada’s major cities about the risk of overbuilding, and the first line of defence would be immigration and its critical role in supporting demand,” Tal writes in a note he co-authored with Nick Exarhos. “It turns out that at least for now, this claim is more valid than widely believed.”
Tal says out that not only do new immigrants account for about 70 per cent of our population growth about half of them are in the 2544 age cohort, a key demographic that will lead to more household formation.
In 2013, the number of Canadians aged 20-44 grew by 1.1 per cent, which is the fastest pace in more than two decades and stronger than the average of countries in the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development.
“Healthier demographics are benefiting trends in household formation,” they write. “In fact, despite some concerns of overbuilding in the current housing boom, the ratio of housing starts to household formation is not far from its long-term average of 1.03.”
The bottom line is that when the housing boom does wind down it will not be as dramatic as once feared because of those immigrants picking up the slack, says the paper.
Their argument that immigration is being underestimated comes largely from underestimating the number of non-permanent residents in Canada which includes students, temporary workers and humanitarian refugees. That number was 22,000 in 2013 which brought the total number of NPRs to 774,000.
“Those are big numbers. And evidently when it comes to measuring household formation in Canada and its implication for the appropriate level of homebuilding, we understate the number of those non-permanent residents,” the economists say.
They say researchers are using the 2011 census to estimate household formation in Canada and that census bases household formation on 400,000 non-permanent residents which is 200,000 below even figures reported by Citizen and Immigration Canada.
“It’s a huge gap,” they write. “The gap is increasingly becoming more relevant for household demand since a growing portion of non-permanent residents come from workers and students with a high propensity to rent.”