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June 2008
Housing report's cracks evident
The Saskatchewan government's recent Task Force on Housing Affordability report
tackles an important topic, but it misses the underlying economics of housing.
It erroneously implies that affordable housing is isolated from the rest of the
market -- which could supposedly never deliver housing for everyone --and that
certain policies which have failed elsewhere will somehow work here. Meanwhile,
except for an accidental mention, it ignores the growing research that finds
regulation is the real driver of house prices.
The Regina housing market is experiencing a major demand-side shock. Vacancy
rates, house prices and rental rates all tell the same story. Those on the
margins of shelter are hardest hit by this shock. Their housing problems are a
symptom of the competition to secure accommodations from a limited supply in a
white-hot economy. However, it should be noted that the increase in house prices
affects everyone. The two big underlying assumptions of the report are that
affordable housing exists in isolation and that the problem affects only those
at the margin. The report recommends creating housing solely for these people,
and it largely ignores the rest of the market.
In its better parts, the report claims that "traditionally marginalized groups"
need more holistic social support in order to find housing. However there is a
belief that, even with these supports the housing market could never deliver
housing for them. The report implies a swath of market fiddling is required, and
this is where some really silly recommendations surface.
Perhaps the silliest is the removal of PST on materials "specifically used to
build affordable housing." For a product also driven by land and labour costs,
every supplier arguing that his or her building material should qualify for the
five-per- cent saving would woefully complicate the tax system for meagre
benefit.
The report acknowledges that rent control fails because it prevents developers
from covering their costs, and creates even worse housing shortages. It then
recommends two sub-species of rent control. Making a proportion of new
developments affordable (inclusionary zoning) is a type of rent control that
backfired spectacularly in the many Californian jurisdictions that tried it.
Longer notification for rent
increases amounts to short-term rent control that sidesteps the question of why
frequent increases are occurring.
Indeed, there is a growing international literature that shows that regulation
of land use and construction drives housing costs. As former New Zealand Reserve
Bank governor Donald Brash recently
stated, "the affordability of housing is overwhelmingly a function of just one
thing, the extent to which governments place artificial restrictions on the
supply of residential land." Econometric studies from the United States -- a
great policy laboratory with so many housing markets applying different policies
-- find that the impact of zoning, building regulations and permit delay are
responsible for anywhere from 15 per cent to 90 per cent of house price
increases. Some might respond that Saskatchewan is leading Canada for building
permits, but that is not aiming high enough on a continent that is generally
losing affordability from sea to sea.
Perhaps the most supply-aware recommendations are the streamlining of the
regulations around secondary suites and the revision of journeymen to apprentice
ratios. The report also acknowledges (accidentally perhaps) the effects of
regulation on the overall supply when it suggests that some projects should be
fast-tracked. The report is onto something, but again it treats only the symptom
of low-end affordability rather than the disease of the overall market.
In the normal run of things, housing supply should meet demand just as it has
here in the past, and just as it does for other cities and other products. To
say that relatively small cities on the Prairies are reaching natural limits is
untenable. A look at the ages of houses in major Prairie cities shows that
current growth is brisk, but not exceptional compared to that of the 1970s and
early 1980s. There exist much larger, faster-growing cities in North America
that have more affordable housing. Another commonsense observation is that
almost every commodity apart from housing can now be purchased for fewer hours'
wages than could be done 20 years ago. If trade and technology have made
everything else more affordable, then why not housing?
David Seymour is the Saskatchewan
Policy Analyst at the Frontier Centre for Public Policy, an independent think
tank with offices in Winnipeg, Regina and Calgary. www.fcpp.org
Keywords: David Seymour,
News Beats: Municipal