Agreed on all fronts. In my activism experience in Ontario specifically, I remember how the province would often push back against municipalities that wanted to build something. NIMBYism is another big problem, but the often-overlooked issue is the fact that the private sector is deliberately holding back development because it’s more profitable to do so, especially when interest rates are so high.
The amount of profit in building low-rise and even high-rise (non-luxury) developments just doesn’t justify the costs, and when every unit you build effectively drives down the amount you can charge for for each unit, there’s simply no incentive to build at the rate we need.
There are whole swathes of undeveloped or underdeveloped land in and around cities that would benefit from a crown corporation with deep pockets that would buy up land and build affordable housing on it. A body with the power to compel companies not using land to sell it to the state so that it can be developed for the public good, and with the political cover to piss off local NIMBY organisations without having to worry about political blowback.
There is so much “I’ve got mine” attitude that solving the crisis has become such a political issue. Everyone wants to fix the housing crisis but only if they keep seeing 10% annual returns on their real estate. I agree that a crown corp buying land and building housing would be good, but many people would argue the government is subsidizing and “handing out housing” while others have had to struggle for a mortgage. This bubble has gotten so big its becoming impossible to deflate until it bursts catastrophically.
The best thing we could do for the housing crisis is focusing on infilling and upzoning density, as that could set us up for better transit projects that could snowball into more density and upzoning while also putting us in a better position to become more environmentally friendly and far less car dependant.
Agreed on all fronts. In my activism experience in Ontario specifically, I remember how the province would often push back against municipalities that wanted to build something. NIMBYism is another big problem, but the often-overlooked issue is the fact that the private sector is deliberately holding back development because it’s more profitable to do so, especially when interest rates are so high.
The amount of profit in building low-rise and even high-rise (non-luxury) developments just doesn’t justify the costs, and when every unit you build effectively drives down the amount you can charge for for each unit, there’s simply no incentive to build at the rate we need.
There are whole swathes of undeveloped or underdeveloped land in and around cities that would benefit from a crown corporation with deep pockets that would buy up land and build affordable housing on it. A body with the power to compel companies not using land to sell it to the state so that it can be developed for the public good, and with the political cover to piss off local NIMBY organisations without having to worry about political blowback.
There is so much “I’ve got mine” attitude that solving the crisis has become such a political issue. Everyone wants to fix the housing crisis but only if they keep seeing 10% annual returns on their real estate. I agree that a crown corp buying land and building housing would be good, but many people would argue the government is subsidizing and “handing out housing” while others have had to struggle for a mortgage. This bubble has gotten so big its becoming impossible to deflate until it bursts catastrophically.
The best thing we could do for the housing crisis is focusing on infilling and upzoning density, as that could set us up for better transit projects that could snowball into more density and upzoning while also putting us in a better position to become more environmentally friendly and far less car dependant.