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This past week, the Federal government in Canada took the step of temporarily banning foreign purchase of residential real estate for two years.
\\nIt\\u2019s no secret that real estate markets in Canada have been hot, much like in many markets in the US.
\\nOn Today\\u2019s show we\\u2019re looking at housing with non-resident ownership, and whether the temporary ban will in fact have the desired impact of lowering home ownership costs for ordinary citizens and residents.
\\nThe foreign ownership ban is one of several measures introduced in the budget last week aimed at making housing more affordable.
\\nIn my view, this new regulation is a decoy. Inflation is the result of printing money. Rising prices are the symptom of inflation. Just like a fever is a symptom of the flu. You can try to treat the symptoms, or you can attempt to address the root cause.
\\nThe root cause of rising prices is lack of supply and strong demand. But the lack of supply is overwhelmingly governed by very slow and bureaucratic approval processes that can in many cases take years to see a project fully approved.
\\nArtificially eliminating demand may have a small temporary impact. But then we will experience a surge in demand once the ban is over.
\\nGovernment simply will not admit its role in inflation. It\\u2019s too convenient to blame others. They\\u2019ll blame the grocery store for high food prices, and the gas station for high gasoline prices. They won\\u2019t say I\\u2019m Sorry Mr and Misses electorate, we screwed up. We printed too much money. It\\u2019s easier to blame all those foreign buyers who have no vote for Canada\\u2019s domestic problems.
\\nThis move is taken straight out of the playbook from George Orwell\\u2019s classic novel 1984. When there is a problem domestically, the playbook says you need to take aim at a foreign enemy and that will unit the country against the foreign enemy and deflect attention from the real issue.
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\\nHost: Victor Menasce
\\nemail: podcast@victorjm.com
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