Virtually all Canadians say they believe the country is in the midst of a housing crisis, with 69 percent strongly agreeing with the statement and 26 percent saying they somewhat agree.
The survey also asked which level of government they thought was primarily responsible for the housing crisis, and 46 percent answered the federal government. At the same time, 26 percent said the responsibility lies with the provincial governments, and 8 percent said municipal governments.
When it came to who should take the lead in addressing the housing crisis, 46 percent answered the federal government, 26 percent said provincial governments, and 7 percent said municipal governments. One in five said they were unsure who was to blame or who should be responsible for addressing housing challenges.
The Parliamentary Budget Officer recently reported that an estimated 2.6 million Canadian households will be in need of new housing by 2027, while 2.4 million households are already in “core housing need” because their home is either in need of major repairs, does not have enough bedrooms for the household size, or costs them 30 percent or more of their before-tax income.
Ottawa has introduced several policies relating to increasing available housing, such as adding $15 billion to the apartment construction loan financing program, putting an additional $400 million into the Housing Accelerator Fund, and introducing a Tax-Free First Home Savings Account.
The Conservatives also proposed removing the GST from new homes, listing 15 percent of the federal government’s 37,000 buildings, and appropriating federal land to be turned into housing.