Easier mortgage rules won't fix Canada’s housing crisis
The finance department unveiled a new benchmark interest rate on Tuesday as part of stress tests that determine whether people qualify for insured mortgages. This comes after criticism that the policy was too tight and unfairly kept younger, first-time buyers out the market.
The gap between the old qualifying rate and the new rate is about 30 basis points, which will allow the median household in Canada to buy $13,500 (US$9,800) in extra real estate, according to CIBC’s Benjamin Tal. That equates to less than a 3 per cent improvement in purchasing power, the bank’s deputy chief economist wrote Friday in a note to clients.
It’s becoming more and more apparent that, short of drastic measures, it’s impossible to fight supply issues with demand tools,” Tal said. “Increased supply (rental or otherwise) is the only reasonable solution to the housing affordability crisis that many Canadians are facing.”
While the existing qualification rule, introduced in 2016 for insured mortgages and extended in 2018 to the uninsured space, were effective in restoring balance to a market that seemed to be escalating out of control, a rebound in Canadian housing is underway. Home prices in some of the country’s largest cities such as Toronto climbed to fresh records recently, driven higher by dwindling inventories.