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submitted 1 day ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
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[-] [email protected] 4 points 1 day ago

From other parts of the internet. I don't agree with all of it but for the most part it's decent and worth thinking about.

People should understand at this point if we keep trying to point to a single thing to that needs change it likely won't actually do much or at least in our lifetime. We need a lot of things to go in the right direction to bring back affordability and should appropriately call out people who aren't pulling their weight.


Group Primary Power Barrier Type
Federal Gov Policy + Land Infrastructure, tax policy
Provincial Gov Regulation Zoning, development bottlenecks
Municipal Gov Zoning + Fees NIMBYism, slow approvals
Homeowners Political + Market Speculation, resistance to change
Homebuyers Market demand Concentrated bidding, expectations
Developers Supply gatekeeping Profit prioritization
Financial Institutions Lending policy Market inflation, investment bias
Real Estate Industry Messaging & Listings Speculation promotion
Media/Culture Perception Market pressure via social norms
Labour/Materials Capacity Rising costs, build delays

🔹 1. Federal Government

Role:

Land Ownership: The federal government controls significant amounts of Crown land, much of which sits unused or underutilized in urban peripheries.
Taxation Policy: Federal capital gains rules, income from property, and the existence or absence of incentives for affordable development influence developer and homeowner behaviour.
Housing Acts & Funding: The National Housing Strategy and CMHC programs often focus on social housing, leaving market-rate affordable housing under-addressed. Funding for infrastructure also sets the pace for development.

Barrier Mechanisms:

Hoarding of federal land or delays in land release.
Tax incentives that reward property speculation over occupancy or long-term affordability.
Underinvestment in transportation or infrastructure that could make cheaper land more viable.

🔹 2. Provincial Governments

Role:

Land & Zoning Control: Provinces control Crown land within their jurisdictions and direct land-use policies through legislation.
Regulatory Oversight: They set building codes, development appeal processes, and housing-related tribunal systems.
Tax Levers: Property transfer taxes, speculation taxes (like BC’s Speculation and Vacancy Tax), and provincial rebates or grants.

Barrier Mechanisms:

Overregulation or slow regulatory processes.
Inconsistent or unclear direction to municipalities.
Delays or gaps in infrastructure funding necessary to enable new developments.

🔹 3. Municipal Governments

Role:

Zoning and Development Approvals: Municipalities control land use and zoning, including height, density, and land use rules.
Fees & Levies: Development charges, community amenity contributions, parkland dedications, etc.
Local Politics: Local councils are heavily influenced by existing homeowners and vocal NIMBY (Not In My Backyard) groups.

Barrier Mechanisms:

Low-density zoning in urban cores.
Bureaucratic or slow permitting processes.
Restriction of development to protect "neighbourhood character."
Lack of coordination with surrounding municipalities for regional planning.

🔹 4. Homeowners

Role:

Political Influence: Homeowners are highly engaged voters and often resist developments that may reduce their property value or change the character of their neighbourhood.
Speculation: Use of primary homes and investment properties as financial instruments rather than housing.

Barrier Mechanisms:

Resistance to densification.
Holding on to underutilized properties.
Purchasing additional properties, reducing overall supply for first-time buyers.

🔹 5. Home Buyers

Role:

Demand Pressure: Flocking to desirable areas and competing with each other fuels bidding wars.
Preferences: Preferences for certain neighbourhoods, amenities, or detached homes limit the demand for other more affordable but less "prime" options.

Barrier Mechanisms:

Exacerbation of housing bubbles in hot markets.
Little market pressure for developers to build outside of high-demand areas or diversify product types.

🔹 6. Developers & Builders

Role:

Control of Supply: They are the ones actually producing housing.
Profit-Motivated: Focused on returns; higher-end or luxury units offer greater profit margins.
Land Banking: May hold land for future resale at higher value instead of building now.

Barrier Mechanisms:

Preference for high-margin projects (e.g., condos vs. family-sized rentals).
Delayed builds due to market timing ("just-in-time" development).
Underbuilding affordable units unless incentivized or required.

🔹 7. Financial Institutions (Banks, Mortgage Lenders, Investors)

Role:

Credit Policy: Lending practices directly affect who can buy and how much they can borrow.
Investment Products: REITs and other housing-focused investment vehicles treat housing as an asset class.

Barrier Mechanisms:

Easy credit can inflate prices.
Institutional ownership of housing stock reduces supply available for private ownership.
Risk-averse lending discourages innovative or affordable projects.

🔹 8. Real Estate Industry (Agents, MLS systems, Speculators)

Role:

Market Messaging: Pushes narratives around “invest now or miss out.”
Intermediation: Agents, especially in hot markets, may encourage bidding wars.

Barrier Mechanisms:

Speculation culture.
Pressure to treat homes as investments first, shelter second.

🔹 9. Media & Cultural Norms

Role:

Narrative Shaping: Reinforces the idea that real estate is the ultimate path to wealth.
Desirability Framing: Promotes specific types of housing (e.g., detached homes) and locations as aspirational.

Barrier Mechanisms:

Normalization of price increases.
Discourages demand for alternative housing types or models.

🔹 10. Labour and Materials Supply Chain

Role:

Constrains Supply: A lack of skilled tradespeople or high material costs can slow or block construction.

Barrier Mechanisms:

Increased build times and costs.
Preference for projects that are more profitable to offset higher labour/material costs.
[-] [email protected] 1 points 18 hours ago

Your chart somewhat implys that infrastructure is strictly a federal issue when all 3 governmental levels play a role. Feds play a role in funding and transport across provincial borders, provinces play a role in funding for themselves and municipalities. Municipalities can decide how many lanes, specific speed limits, and transit development. Until very recently a municipality had all the power to build a bike lane themselves without provincial permission.

The way our cities are built are one of the biggest issues with our housing crisis. Increasing density is one of the best things we can do to build out of this crisis and for the most part, we don't need anything from the feds to do it, funding would be nice but its certainly possible to start without it.

[-] [email protected] 5 points 1 day ago

The 6 conservative provinces are an obstacle to affordable housing.

[-] [email protected] 0 points 1 day ago

Is that actually true, isn't this a non-issue in Alberta essentially? The Liberals have not really been any better on it either

[-] [email protected] 2 points 1 day ago

The actual report card in question. No province does that well and as usual Alberta is a standout in how poorly someone can run a province.

https://moreandbetterhousing.ca/2025/05/26/reportcard/

[-] [email protected] 1 points 1 day ago

https://moreandbetterhousing.ca/wp-content/uploads/2025/05/ReportCard.pdf

This is the full 56 page report. I do think it's rather generous on the Federal level for omitting what a real federal tax reform could do along with how HAF has gone.

I also think they should have truly split out the municipal and provincial aspects. It would have brought the BC grade go up noticeably and lower Alberta even more.

this post was submitted on 30 May 2025
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