How Vancouver became a speculators’ playground
Daphne Bramham
The Vancouver Sun
There’s something almost pathetically naive about the City of Vancouver’s plan to tax owners of vacant homes.
Forget its most obvious flaws. It would be hideously expensive to administer and police. It would be largely dependent on self-reporting, and despite Canadians’ Dudley Do-Right reputation, I expect few are all that willing to out themselves as empty home owners (and, if not self-reporting, the city hopes neighbours will snitch on neighbours — something normally relied on by only the most oppressive regimes).
The crucial problem? It won’t end speculation, which is something that municipalities along with the development industry and the provincial government were complicit in helping to create.
Less than a decade ago, municipalities lobbied hard to get the B.C. government to change the Strata Property Act so that all newly constructed strata-titled homes would be available for rentals. The 2010 amendment prevented newly formed strata corporations from passing bylaws that would either restrict the number of rental units or ban them entirely.
Rental restrictions and bans were popular among owners who live in their condos. Most viewed the restrictions as enhancing their property’s value and their quality of life because they promoted a more stable, shared community.
To be fair, exempting new condos from rental restrictions was likely done with the best of intentions, as a means of increasing the rental stock. But it backfired.
“It became an open playground for speculators,” says Tony Gioventu of the Condominium Home Owners’ Association.
By 2010, the population was growing and, increasingly, those with means began to regard Vancouver as a nice, safe place to have a condo as a second home or vacation property. Overseas “pre-sales” of condos had long been normalized. Interest and bond rates were at historic lows and have remained there. Stocks were only starting the long, slow (and ongoing) struggle to regain the values lost in the 2008 crash.
While condo prices haven’t risen at the pace of single-family houses, last year alone the average assessed value of a Coal Harbour condo increased 12 per cent. In West Vancouver, Delta and Coquitlam, average assessments went up between eight and 10 per cent.
For investors, the choice of where to plant money is simple. Condos provide a carefree investment, especially if you don’t need the bother of renters.
In a recent survey, CHOA found that in condos built since 2010 in high-end neighbourhoods like False Creek and Coal Harbour, anywhere from 17 to 34 per cent of the units are occupied for less than one month a year.
Because of the purchase cost, he says, investors would have to set rents somewhere in the range of $3,000 to $6,000 a month for the units to earn income. But with mortgage rates so low, who’s going to pay that kind of rent? Nobody, says Gioventu. So the buyers are mainly people able to carry the cost, holding onto the condo just as they would a speculative stock, until the price gets high enough that they decide to take their profits and run.
Close to 95 per cent of all new housing construction in Metro Vancouver is now strata-titled condos and townhouses. But demand is strong from local people cashing out of single-family homes, locals who can’t afford single-family homes, from non-residents, and, more recently, from Airbnb entrepreneurs with multiple units posted on the sharing economy website for daily and weekly rentals.
And while some strata corporations have managed to pass bylaws banning Airbnb rentals, Gioventu says he is aware of long-term renters being evicted from strata buildings to make way for more lucrative short-term stays.
So what’s the solution? Not the “vacancy tax” that the city is proposing.
Aside from the obvious problems cited above, there would still be the problem of older strata-titled units governed by bylaws that forbid rentals. Owners could end up facing the choice: Rent and pay a fine of up to $500 to the strata corporation, or declare their vacant home to the city and pay the tax.
Gioventu says an easier way would be for the provincial government to use homeowners’ grants as a means for municipalities to retain property taxes by creating two additional categories: one for homes that are always empty, and one for those used as vacation properties or seasonal rentals.
The conundrum of near-zero vacancy rates and a growing number of empty homes has frustrated citizens. It’s also got politicians itching to “solve” the housing affordability problem before the next election cycle.
Plenty of solutions are being booted about, from the city’s plan to others that include banning property ownership by foreigners, cracking down on money laundering, and quickly and dramatically increasing supply to force prices down.
But before politicians leap to any quick fixes, they should think about the 2010 Strata Property Act amendment as a cautionary tale of unintended consequences.
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