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First-Time Home Buyer 2024

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A SPECIAL INTEREST SECTION BY MEDIAPLANET

First-Time Home Buyer Q&A with Minister Sean Fraser Mediaplanet sat down with the Honourable Sean Fraser, Minister of Housing, Infrastructure and Communities to discuss Canada's housing crisis, outlining government initiatives that can ease the first-time home buying process. How does the government plan to collaborate with real estate stakeholders and developers to encourage the creation of affordable housing options tailored to the needs of first-time buyers? The housing crisis is impacting Canadians in every region of the country, and has a unique impact on those seeking to buy a home for the first time. The rising cost of buying a home has created a generational wealth gap between those who got into the market years ago, and benefitted from the extraordinary growth in their home’s value, and those who are not able to save for a downpayment, not just because they are unemployed or because they come from a low-income household, but because the price of a new home in markets across Canada is out of reach for many middle class families who don’t have significant financial support from their parents. We can overcome this phenomenon, and my engagement with the sector tells me that we, as a society, know how. Canada faces a shortage in housing supply. We need to build homes, and we need to build them by the millions. In order to

remedy the supply gap, we must implement measures to reduce the cost of home building, including tax measures and low-cost financing programs that incentivize home construction. Second, we must help change the way cities build homes by incentivizing faster municipal permitting processes, and encouraging more density where infrastructure, services, and opportunities already exist. Third, we need to embrace a new way of building homes by encouraging workforce development in home building and increasing the manufacturing of factory-built homes. Fourth, we must directly fund the construction of more affordable housing for low-income Canadians who cannot afford a place to live in the market. Fifth, we should embrace opportunities to help first-time home buyers save for their first home through measures that make it easier to save for that downpayment. Finally, we need to target challenges in the sector that have caused investors and

We need to build homes, and we need to build them by the millions.

Read the entire interview with Minister Sean Fraser on innovatingcanada.ca

at times, bad actors, to buy up properties that are not being used to provide homes for families, including short-term rentals, mortgage fraud, and other challenges that have artificially restricted supply that exists but is not available in the market. Though not all of these measures explicitly target first-time buyers, we know that growing the supply for buyers, renters, and low-income families will help ease pricing pressures in the market, and supporting a new generation of home-buyers through targeted incentives will ensure those who missed out on home ownership because of the generation they were born into have a fair shot at owning a home if they choose.

The Current State of Housing Stresses the Need for More Collaboration Without true collaboration between governments, the private sector, and public-interest groups, efforts to address Canada’s housing crisis will always fall flat.

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Shaheed Devji & Trevor Hargreaves, BC Real Estate Association

This article was sponsored by British Columbie Real Estate Association.

or decades now, the housing sector has been a crucible of economic and social challenges, and despite efforts from governments of all stripes at all levels to find solutions to the housing affordability crisis, owning and renting a home has never been more difficult. The way of the past has not been effective enough. Policymakers, stakeholder groups, and the public all have decisions to make that will affect the state of housing for the foreseeable future. We can settle for the same old reactive approach to housing policy, or we can demand better — a new, more comprehensive and collaborative approach. Housing issues are intertwined, complex, and multi-faceted. To properly tackle these issues, it’s going to require equally diverse groups of carefully chosen policy experts from across government and the private sector working collaboratively to share ideas and pretest policy for unintended problems before new housing measures are announced. This structure could be used to great effect at both the provincial and federal levels. Effectively, we would be creating a permanent housing roundtable.

Housing issues are intertwined, complex, and multifaceted.

Continue reading on page 5.

Publisher: Ali Qaiser Business Development Manager: Maddie MacNeil Country Manager: Nina Theodorlis Production & Delivery Manager: Michael Taylor Creative Director: Kylie Armishaw Graphic & Web Designer: Christina Morgan Digital & Social Media Strategist: Kristen Neals Digital Traffic Strategist: Karm Rathod All images are from Getty Images unless otherwise credited. This section was created by Mediaplanet and did not involve The National Post or its editorial departments. Send all inquiries to ca.editorial@mediaplanet.com.


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