The Peterborough Examiner

Candidates set sights on affordabil­ity

- SHELLY HAGAN AND ERIK HERTZBERG

OTTAWA — Canada’s political party leaders are making affordabil­ity the central talking point of their election campaigns, rolling out targeted measures to alleviate the financial strain besetting voters.

Though broad economic data show the nation’s economy is humming along, Canadians are still feeling tight on cash. The worsening global outlook and unpreceden­ted policy uncertaint­y are adding to the apprehensi­on.

Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau and Conservati­ve Leader Andrew Scheer, along with the leaders of smaller parties are seeking to parlay that stress into votes as the clock winds down on the Oct. 21 election, by promising a slew of tax cuts and other measures to make life more affordable.

“Politician­s are putting their finger on something, some form of financial anxiety about rising costs, or concerns about future rising costs, or future standard of living,” said Jennifer Robson, associate professor of political management at Carleton University in Ottawa.

Here’s why consumers are feeling pinched.

It’s old news that owning a home in Canada’s biggest cities has become an almost impossible goal for much of the middle class. Skyrocketi­ng prices in recent years pushed potential buyers to the sidelines. New mortgage lending rules, socalled stress tests introduced by federal regulators in 2017, put ownership even further out of reach for many.

Toronto and Vancouver are easily Canada’s two main cities where residents are struggling to find an affordable place to live. The average selling price for a single-family home in Vancouver was $1.51 million in September, and $1.1 million in Toronto. Renting in those cities is no easy feat, either, as low vacancy rates have pushed up prices for accommodat­ion.

Elevated real estate prices are the main driver of the country’s record household debt ratios, now the highest in the Group of Seven. Buyers took out larger and larger mortgages as the housing market heated up, even as incomes failed to keep pace. As a result, household savings rates are hovering near the lowest in decades, and the debt service ratio — which measures the share of disposable income paid toward principal and interest — climbed to a record in the second quarter.

While overall price inflation in Canada has been relatively benign, shoppers have experience­d sticker shock on many basics. Prices for fruits and vegetables jumped as much as 60 per cent in the past decade, according to Statistics Canada. Child-care and tuition costs rose upwards of 35 per cent, and public transit prices ballooned by 50 per cent.

To top it all off, wages after accounting for inflation have remained relatively flat, even as costs for rent and basic goods increased. A puzzle for many economists and policy-makers is why unemployme­nt is hovering near record lows, yet incomes are struggling to pick up.

 ?? SEAN KILPATRICK THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau and other party leaders are promising measures to make life more affordable for families.
SEAN KILPATRICK THE CANADIAN PRESS Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau and other party leaders are promising measures to make life more affordable for families.

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