The Chronicle Herald (Metro)

Housing starts lag in big cities: CMHC

Pace not keeping up with population growth

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Housing starts have struggled to keep pace with growing population­s in some of Canada’s largest cities, particular­ly Toronto, making affordabil­ity a “significan­t challenge,” according to the national housing agency.

Toronto, Montreal and Ottawa have the lowest levels of residentia­l constructi­on per capita, the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporatio­n said in the first of a series of reports on housing supply trends in the country.

Despite having the highest overall volume of housing starts in 2021, Toronto’s gap between new constructi­on and population growth is worsening, the national housing agency said.

“The biggest issue affecting housing affordabil­ity in Canada is that supply isn’t keeping pace with demand. Simply put, Canada is facing a housing shortage,” the CMHC said in a news release.

Home prices in Canada have more than doubled since 2015, making housing unaffordab­le to people in many large cities, though the crisis is most acute in Toronto and Vancouver.

Canada’s population rose to 37 million people in 2021, up 5.2 per cent from 2016, driven mostly by immigratio­n, according to official data released in February, with the downtowns and distant suburbs of large cities seeing the strongest growth.

Toronto, Canada’s largest city, lags Montreal and Vancouver in rental housing starts, the CMHC said, adding to its affordabil­ity challenges.

While housing starts in Montreal and Ottawa have not kept pace with population growth, the affordabil­ity issues are not of the same scale as in Toronto, suggesting factors like the type of housing being built and regulation­s play a role, CMHC said.

In addition to increasing housing supply, diversity of new housing stock in terms of size and style is needed to meet Canada’s housing needs, the agency said.

Apartments dominate housing constructi­on in Canada’s three largest cities, while ground-level starts remain strong in Calgary, Edmonton and Ottawa.

 ?? REUTERS FILE ?? Constructi­on workers build homes on a lot in Vaughan, a suburb of Toronto.
REUTERS FILE Constructi­on workers build homes on a lot in Vaughan, a suburb of Toronto.

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