• @[email protected]
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    511 year ago

    Housing will never be affordable as long as it’s treated like an investment.

    The government could solve the housing crisis, and then they’d have to deal with the crisis of elderly citizens who were counting on selling their homes for 2 million dollars to fund their lifestyle in retirement.

    They’re going to pay a lot of lip service towards building housing these next 20 years without actually doing anything, because doing something would negatively impact property values.

    • Pxtl
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      1 year ago

      It literally was affordable just fine when it was treated as an investment before, back in the '90s. It’s always been treated as an investment. What happened is we stopped building enough of it.

      If you stop making enough food, people starve.

      If you stop making enough housing, people go homeless.

      Population growth of adults has gone up, while housing production of bedrooms has gone down.

      I don’t get why this is complicated.

      I thought the pandemic gave everybody a very harsh lesson about what happens to prices when we stop making stuff (two words: chip shortage) but I guess lessons are hard.

      • @[email protected]
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        1 year ago

        The only way it makes sense as a financial investment is if population continues to grow and homes values continue to rise above inflation - it’s inherently unsustainable.

        Seriously, a simple though would show how bad of an idea financializing a basic human need is.

        Homes are infrastructure.

      • @[email protected]
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        101 year ago

        No, this is revisionist history. The 90s were part of a nearly 15 year period when house prices were flat in Canada. For quite a few years your return would have been negative. People in the 90s were not thinking of their house as their retirement account.

        We did stop making enough housing, but it’s precisely that artificial scarcity that is making people treat it as an “investment”. If we make enough, it will not be treated primarily as an investment anymore, which is how it should be.

        • @[email protected]
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          11 year ago

          The 90s followed the extremely high interest rates, which were why housing was flat. People couldn’t easily buy in, so demand was reduced.

          • @[email protected]
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            31 year ago

            But that just further corroborates the point: when housing was at its most affordable it was not considered a good investment.

            It’s also important to note that housing remained flat even when interest rates went down, partially because of a healthy stock of non-market and market housing.

      • @[email protected]
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        51 year ago

        It literally was affordable just fine when it was treated as an investment before, back in the '90s.

        Yes, that’s how investments work. They are less money at the beginning and then grow over time. If you want apple stock to be affordable like it was in the 90s you’d need to harm the investments of everyone who has already bought it. If you want housing to be affordable you need to hurt the property values of everyone who already has a house.

        • @[email protected]
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          1 year ago

          Not necessarily. They also can give income, so a taxi company can invest in a taxi even though cars depreciate, because they get returns on it that way.

          I don’t know why we don’t have enough houses, but it’s not because you can’t make money as a landlord.

    • @[email protected]
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      1 year ago

      Housing will never be affordable as long as it’s treated like an investment.

      Owning a home IS an investment. Renting is not.

      Nobody would want to own a home if they didn’t get some kind of return on investment when it came time to scale down/retire/put it in your will, etc.

      “Affordable housing” should really be “affordable renting”.

      EDIT: if you’re going to downvote, at least explain why. This is the reality of the housing/rental market we all live in. Don’t shoot the messenger.

      • @[email protected]
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        111 year ago

        Do you get a return on investment directly in merely owning a car? No, of course not. People still buy cars. (To avoid confusion: cars open other economic opportunities, but just sitting on a car by itself is not an investment.)

        On the other hand, if cars did become an investment, people would hoard cars and they would be less affordable for people who actually use cars productively. High real estate prices are similarly hurting the economy.

        • @[email protected]
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          -31 year ago

          Cars and homes are two totally different things. Why even compare the two?

          Also, some people do buy cars to resell at a profit. The vintage and classic car industry is one example of that.

          Houses are an investment because they sit on land that increases in value over time. Some people don’t even profit from the sale of their house, but from the sale of the land.

          What is the argument, then?

          Stats Canada makes it clear that rental housing is affordable for those making less than the median income (25% of expenses spent on housing), and that most mortgage holders are not spending more than 30% of their household income on housing.

          By definition, it’s all affordable if you aren’t making well below the median income for an individual (which is $32,000 after tax).

          Can we use more low-cost housing? Absolutely.

          I’ve never argued against that, but I think people need to understand the definition of affordable housing and what that actually means.

          • @[email protected]
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            11 year ago

            When you profit off of merely sitting on land, you are essentially leaching off of society. Economists call this “economic rent”, which is a kind of theft where a person gains from the productive activity of others, without producing anything of value themselves. This is why the nickname for a land tax is “the perfect tax”. You didn’t “produce” anything from the increase in real estate price. Like a car, your house structure itself is actually a depreciating asset and is worth less every year.

            This is different from a productive investment like a share in a company, because a company can use that money to invest in useful capital, like factories or workers. This is why Canada’s obsession with real estate “investment” is causing the economy to contract in terms of GDP-per-capita.

            Your last few paragraphs denying that there is a housing affordability crisis in Canada is completely and ridiculously outside the mainstream. Literally no expert agrees with you.

            • @[email protected]
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              01 year ago

              When you profit off of merely sitting on land, you are essentially leaching off of society.

              I’m not arguing for “sitting on land”, and this never came up in any of these threads, so I’m not sure where you’re going with that.

              Land, whether you use it or not, is subject to tax, so it’s not “theft”.

              This is different from a productive investment like a share in a company, because a company can use that money to invest in useful capital, like factories or workers.

              Two different forms of investment.

              Your last few paragraphs denying that there is a housing affordability crisis in Canada is completely and ridiculously outside the mainstream. Literally no expert agrees with you.

              I quite literally quoted what Stats Canada data says, and that’s being applied to the universal definition of “affordable housing”. Experts can disagree with the stats all they like, but it’s not “me” who came up with them.

              • @[email protected]
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                21 year ago

                If you don’t profit from sitting on land, then real estate is not a profitable investment. Prices should be flat. Still lots of reasons to own your own home, but leaching the productivity of others isn’t one of them. If you think that is good, then we’re in agreement?

                Your personal interpretation of Stats Canada is like personally interpreting Ivermectin studies. Every expert across the political and economic spectrum, from left to right, thinks that there is a housing affordability crisis. It’s scary that people like you, who deny that there is even a problem, exist.

                • @[email protected]
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                  01 year ago

                  If you don’t profit from sitting on land, then real estate is not a profitable investment. Prices should be flat. Still lots of reasons to own your own home, but leaching the productivity of others isn’t one of them.

                  Explain.

                  Land has value, and sometimes it goes down, but it usually goes up. Whether you are actively using the land is completely irrelevant because someone will pay you to make use of it.

                  I don’t think that people should be allowed to hoard large amounts of land for the purpose of selling it later on, so there should be regulations put in place to prevent this.

                  But calling a farmer who isn’t actually using their land and who wants to sell it at a profit to some developer “leaching” seems harsh.

                  Every expert across the political and economic spectrum, from left to right, thinks that there is a housing affordability crisis. It’s scary that people like you, who deny that there is even a problem, exist.

                  That’s unfair. I’m going by the universal definition of “affordable housing” set by these experts, while using Stats Canada data to illustrate that the majority of Canadians can afford housing (rental).

                  You can disagree or claim that I deny there’s a problem, but perhaps we are using different criteria here.

                  What definition of “affordable housing” are you going by, and what data are you using to support the idea that Canadians can’t afford housing?

                  I find that the biggest challenge to discussing affordable housing is that some people have wildly different ideas of what that means.

      • @[email protected]
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        1 year ago

        You’re being downvoted because this is the attitude that got us into, and is keeping us in, this mess. Let us be precise with terms: housing is not a speculative investment. You don’t buy a house because you presume it will appreciate 100-1000% by the time you sell it. That attitude leads to the paradox that the government is unable to stop: you either build/allow affordable housing, lowering prices and crashing people’s speculative investment, or you restrict new home building through restrictive zoning and NIMBYism run wild, letting houses appreciate to the point of unaffordability.

        You buy a house to live in long term: to buy it back from the bank and own it all to yourself. You have right to sell it for an equal or roughly price tracking rate with inflation. That’s a good investment. Every Canadian has the right to buy affordable housing. Saying affordable housing is affordable renting is not only reductive but downright prejudicial: people don’t rent because they’re poor. They rent because they want the freedom to move without selling a house. They rent because they are building lives as students or young families or their careers. They rent because they choose to invest their money in something other than house equity. And all the real, concrete policies which help new homeowners (ie building more housing) help renters: these two groups are not at odds with each other.

        • @[email protected]
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          -31 year ago

          You don’t buy a house because you presume it will appreciate 100-1000% by the time you sell it.

          Do people buy homes expecting that they will *lose * value over time?

          Yes, I do think people BUY homes (as opposed to renting one) because it WILL gain value over the life of ownership. Someone living in a house for 50 year should be able to sell it and live off the earnings until they are dead. Why not?

          Every Canadian has the right to buy affordable housing.

          I agree, but not every Canadian understands the expectation of what “affordable housing” really means.

          It’s generally recognized that “affordable housing” means housing that does not exceed 30% of a HOUSEHOLD income before tax.

          Stats Can says that people with mortgages allocated 1/3 of their goods and services spending to shelter costs ($30,000 / year) with $17,000 going towards mortgages.

          By comparison, renters only spend 25% of their spending towards rental payments ($12,200).

          Both would still be considered “affordable housing”, yet it’s clear that someone making a median income would realistically be able to afford rental housing, and not homeownership.

          Saying affordable housing is affordable renting is not only reductive but downright prejudicial: people don’t rent because they’re poor. They rent because they want the freedom to move without selling a house. They rent because they are building lives as students or young families or their careers. They rent because they choose to invest their money in something other than house equity.

          Yes! I completely agree! Renting is not a downgrade from homeownership, but it is distinctly different. That’s why I’d argue that owning a house is an investment, while renting is not (although, renting allows you to invest in other areas).

          We need more affordable rental space, so that every Canadian who earns an income can afford a place to live.

          I simply think it’s unrealistic to believe that every Canadian could ever be able to afford to buy a house with an individual income below the median ($32,000).

      • Victor Villas
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        1 year ago

        I did not downvote, but I’d like to offer my point of view.

        Owning a home IS an investment. Renting is not.

        I think this is a superfluous distinction. Purchasing real estate can be an investment vehicle if you aim to recoup the investment through appreciation (land speculation) or income generating usage (like rentals). It may also not be an investment if you just want to purchase a property to live in it - this is a passive asset, much like a car. You can “rent” your car (and time) to the gig economy, and car prices can rise and you can make a profit by selling one, but in a stable supply market that’s not the norm so cars are generally not regarded as investments. Conversely, renting retail space for commercial usage is an obvious example of income generation on top of a rented property, so rental costs are a factor in other types of investments.

        Nobody would want to own a home if they didn’t get some kind of return on investment when it came time to scale down/retire/put it in your will, etc.

        Plenty of people want to own a home regardless of financial returns. Ownership has its perks, there are plenty of people willing to pay for it. It is a bit of a luxury good nowadays, but one that is very entrenched in most cultures as a symbol of “making it”.

      • Franzia
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        1 year ago

        Oh so you wouldn’t want to own a home if it didn’t pay well? Yeah. Same. And why should I get so shafted for wanting to live in a small apartment as opposed to ‘investing’ in a home?

        A home is meant to be a depreciating asset like a car is. You need to maintain and repair it in order to sell it. You live in it, therefore it would be okay to pay a bit for it, buuuuut thanks to government subsidies and bankers and housing shortages, you are guaranteed to profit.

        I don’t support downvoting you. I disagree with you, but you’ve made a concise and detailed argument for neoliberalism.

        • @[email protected]
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          1 year ago

          A home is meant to be a depreciating asset like a car is.

          It is. Granted, it has become crazy expensive to buy a new home, so the used market has risen to compensate. Actually, we’ve seen the same thing happen in cars recently. New cars have become crazy expensive, so the used car market has gone up in price too.

          But that’s outside of investing. Nothing says depreciating capital cannot be an investment. Consider a widget that cost $100 to buy and after one year is completely worn out and worth $0. But that widget during its useful life produced trinkets that you were able to sell for a profit of $120. There you go, a 20% return on investment, even though the capital is now worth nothing.

          Cars and houses will always fundamentally be investments as long as they remain useful tools of production.

          • Franzia
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            51 year ago

            Houses are literally subsidized into being safe investments. The neoliberal government has decided that this is best for business.

            • @[email protected]
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              1 year ago

              Housing is only a safe investment if it keeps its occupants productive (e.g. allows one to take a job by living nearby). The job market is strong right now, but we’ll see how safe those investments are when that starts to turn…

              But, if you truly believe what you say, why aren’t you buying one of those $100,000 homes in Newfoundland? Anyone can afford that. If the government is going to protect you, how can you lose?

              • @[email protected]
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                11 year ago

                I could be wrong here but I believe that your parent comment is talking about how investments are guaranteed by the government in case of some kind of market shift.

        • @[email protected]
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          -31 year ago

          A home is meant to be a depreciating asset like a car is.

          A car and a home are two very different things, so they can’t be compared here.

          Even the land your home is on increases in value over time, and I’ve yet to see a home in good condition that’s worth less than the amount it was purchased for. Unless you’re talking about those ghost cities in China.

          What exact reason would you give to devalue a perfectly good home?

          • @[email protected]
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            1 year ago

            A car and a home are two very different things, so they can’t be compared here.

            With respect to depreciation they are quite comparable. Deprecation is just the reflection of the remaining lifetime value of something.

            Depreciation just tends to be more obvious in cars, because:

            1. Cars have pushed the technical advancement envelope a lot faster than houses. A 20 year old house still feels like something that was built recently. A 20 year old car feels like it was built by a much earlier civilization. This keeps greeter interest in having the absolute latest model in cars.
            2. Because of #1, people are more likely to recondition a home back to new condition. If a support structure in a house is seeing signs of rot, you are bound to fix it. If a car’s frame starts to rust through, you’re apt to throw the car away and get a new one.

            I’ve yet to see a home in good condition that’s worth less than the amount it was purchased for.

            A home in good condition has approximately the same remaining lifetime value as a new home, so that stands to reason. Not to mention that with ever more stringent building codes, new construction cost has gone up, up, up. The used market always follows the new market.

            Even the land your home is on increases in value over time

            Land does, but that’s independent of the home. I mean, they are usually sold together, but the buyer will determine their utility value independently. Two identical houses will not fetch the same price if one of them sits on more desirable land.

            • @[email protected]
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              -11 year ago

              With respect to depreciation they are quite comparable. Deprecation is just the reflection of the remaining lifetime value of something.

              And the remaining lifetime of a home kept in good condition could be many generations. Where with a car… you could pass that gas guzzler to your kid, but that’s about it.

              In fact, homes can often be renovated to extend their original life far beyond even a few lifetimes. This ignores any upgrades that increase the value (i.e new pool, deck, etc.)

              A home in good condition has approximately the same remaining lifetime value as a new home, so that stands to reason. Not to mention that with ever more stringent building codes, new construction cost has gone up, up, up. The used market always follows the new market.

              Right, so it wouldn’t be depreciated like a car (which loses value to nearly nothing at the end of its usable life).

              Land does, but that’s independent of the home. I mean, they are usually sold together, but the buyer will determine their utility value independently. Two identical houses will not fetch the same price if one of them sits on more desirable land.

              That’s my point, though. When you invest in a home, you are also investing on the land it sits on. So you’re free to sell the home AND land, or just the land, if you like. It’s rare to see just a home (without the land) being sold.

              In your example, the homes are still the same value, only the land changes the sale amount.

              There’s no reason why either home would depreciate in value like a car, and the commenter has yet to expand on this idea.

              • @[email protected]
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                1 year ago

                And the remaining lifetime of a home kept in good condition could be many generations.

                Kept in good condition is the key. If you keep a car in good condition, it can last many generations too.

                In fact, homes can often be renovated to extend their original life far beyond even a few lifetimes.

                Same goes for cars, of course. There is a whole automotive industry around taking beat up old cars and restoring them to pristine condition. And, indeed, many of those cars can sell for way beyond their original price.

                Right, so it wouldn’t be depreciated like a car

                Right, it would deprecate because houses deteriorate. If you keep your house in good condition, it’s just you paying the deprecation cost up front when you restore it rather than taking the hit with the next guy in line. The math works out the same either way. The depreciation doesn’t go away.

                It’s rare to see just a home (without the land) being sold.

                Less common, but not unheard of. It happens often enough that there was once a Canadian TV series about moving houses.

                In your example, the homes are still the same value, only the land changes the sale amount.

                Exactly. Their values are evaluated independently of each other. The house can depreciate and the land can appreciate.

                • @[email protected]
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                  11 year ago

                  Kept in good condition is the key. If you keep a car in good condition, it can last many generations too.

                  I think that you’d need to be reasonable with what you’d expect to pay to keep a car running for generations.

                  I can’t see anyone wanting to spend tens of thousands of dollars keeping their Toyota Corolla running for generations.

                  Cars were never built to last 50+ years, no matter how good you maintain them (The average *maintained *car lasts around 12 years or around 320,000km). The ones that last 50+ years are in museums or auto shows. By contrast, 50-year-old homes are common and quite expected, and if maintained, feel like a new home!

                  Same goes for cars, of course. There is a whole automotive industry around taking beat up old cars and restoring them to pristine condition. And, indeed, many of those cars can sell for way beyond their original price.

                  Yes, as collector vehicles, not as daily drivers. I don’t think anyone envisions affordable housing as a home you’d get on the side to use only occasionally, which is what the cars you describe would be.

                  Right, it would deprecate because houses deteriorate. If you keep your house in good condition, it’s just you paying the deprecation cost when you restore it rather than the next guy in line. The math works out the same either way. The depreciation doesn’t go away.

                  I don’t disagree, but the person I was replying to makes it seem like a house’s value should always be in decline. That doesn’t make any sense, unless it’s been left to rot, which I don’t think people do when they are living in one.

                  Less common, but not unheard of. It happens often enough that there was once a Canadian TV series about moving houses.

                  Of course, I’ve seen a few homes being moved myself! Nobody does that for a house that lost all its value. 😉

                  • @[email protected]
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                    1 year ago

                    I can’t see anyone wanting to spend tens of thousands of dollars keeping their Toyota Corolla running for generations.

                    They just might if a 2023 Toyota Corolla was effectively the same as a 1823 Toyota Corolla, differing little beyond coming in a more appealing colour of paint. Only needing to spend tens of thousands of dollars to have a new car would be a good deal.

                    That doesn’t happen because of the technical innovation happing in cars. Restoring your 1823 Corolla to new condition is nothing like a 2023 Corolla. It will still get you around, but with no cabin, air conditioning, power steering, radio, slower speeds, etc. who would want it? We already discussed this.

                    the person I was replying to makes it seem like a house’s value should always be in decline.

                    They are always in decline. You can spend more to buy the depreciation out when you restore it, or you can let it slip and spend that when you sell it, but the decline happens either way. There is no avoiding it.

                    Well, there is one way to avoid it: If the cost of new housing goes up sufficiently, it will drag the used market it with it. That could see an appreciation in value even with some wear and tear. In fact, we saw exactly that happen in the used car market recently when the “chip shortage” sent the new car market sky high. People were selling their used cars for more than what they were new.

          • Franzia
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            21 year ago

            Well, a home needs to be repaired and improved before sale. This is part of what the market demands. Gets more complicated with land, yeah… leads me back to zoning laws. If the land is so valuable in the suburb of a city, it should have multi-unit housing on it. Then the rich are forced to pay that raising cost and the poor get an increased supply of housing.

            • @[email protected]
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              11 year ago

              Well, a home needs to be repaired and improved before sale. This is part of what the market demands.

              This is part of the investment a homeowner makes, and increasing the value of a home through repairs and renovation really shouldn’t be looked at as a bad thing.

              If you are renting a place, you expect the same repairs and improvements to be made, which is why rent doesn’t simply drop because of “depreciation”.

              If the land is so valuable in the suburb of a city, it should have multi-unit housing on it. Then the rich are forced to pay that raising cost and the poor get an increased supply of housing.

              Well, some people do sell their land so that developers can have their way with it. I don’t think that’s a good thing overall, since there needs to be some balance.

              But multi-unit housing on expensive land does not make it affordable. Having an income that’s above the median, in addition to renting, is what Stats Canada says is affordable housing to the majority of Canadians.