• voluble@lemmy.ca
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    1 month ago

    Housing is not the responsibility of the federal government. Any support they offer would need to be handled by Provincial leadership and municipalities.

    Better tax breaks and incentives for first time buyers, higher restrictions on foreign and corporate ownership of single family homes. Etc. There are plenty of things a motivated federal government could do. This government isn’t motivated to address the housing issue.

    As for “affordability”… that’s a very broad term. Are you referring to anything in particular?

    Something over and above the toothless grocery code of conduct, which hasn’t even been agreed upon? Lower tax rates on earnings for people near and below a living wage, which itself is indexed to inflation.

    And you should also keep in mind that we have a minority Federal Government

    Not while the Liberals held a majority from 2015-2019, and not during the supply and confidence agreement from 2021-2024. It’s incorrect to argue that the Liberals have been hamstrung by a minority Parliament. They could have accomplished anything they wanted to.

    We should demand more from our federal government. The Liberals have been bad, and I don’t understand the view that they’ve done well under the circumstances. They haven’t. I read your comment as apologism for the Liberals, and I genuinely don’t understand that position.

    • Rentlar@lemmy.ca
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      1 month ago

      I don’t disagree that a lot of the Liberal actions have been milquetoast… but they have at some point implemented the things you asked for, for what parts of housing that is in their purview:

      Banned foreign homebuyers in 2022 and extended it to 2027

      Doubled the tax credit in 2021 and added a ‘flipping’ tax

      Added the ability to get into 30 year mortgages (good and bad, but it is something that would make payments easier)

      They’ve done the things you were looking for (I don’t think perfectly at all, mind you), yet within the provinces, only the BCNDP govt. has taken any independent leadership on their part of addressing the housing crisis. Ford has only gotten in the way, and a handful of municipalities have taken action, such as in Edmonton. Yet, people at large and especially Premiers are all pointing the finger at Trudeau for problems instead of thinking how to help.

    • Showroom7561@lemmy.ca
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      1 month ago

      Better tax breaks and incentives for first time buyers

      The feds doubled first time home buyer’s tax credit (2022), set up a “first home savings account” (2023), offers a home buyer’s plan, and some provinces offer their own rebates.

      And as a reminder, even when the feds offer tax breaks to help people, Provinces bitch and complain, like with the recent announcement of a tax-break on certain consumer goods.

      higher restrictions on foreign and corporate ownership of single family homes. Etc.

      The feds announced an extension on bans on foreign ownership of Canadian housing.

      Lower tax rates on earnings for people near and below a living wage, which itself is indexed to inflation.

      There are a LOT of tax credits, rebates, and support for low-income individuals and families. Sure, we can always do more, but the feds have not stopped announcing new programs and extending existing ones.

      Not while the Liberals held a majority from 2015-2019

      Was affordability and housing prices a major problem back then? I don’t seem to recall any of the same ongoing reports of people struggling back then.

      Things like minimum wage are set by Provinces and territories. Only federal employees are impacted by the federal government’s minimum wages.

      We should demand more from our federal government. The Liberals have been bad, and I don’t understand the view that they’ve done well under the circumstances. They haven’t. I read your comment as apologism for the Liberals, and I genuinely don’t understand that position.

      Yes, we should always demand more. No doubt.

      But it seems like the things you’re asking for are already in place, and/or are the responsibility of the Provincial government.

      • voluble@lemmy.ca
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        1 month ago

        Yes, this is what I’m saying. The federal government can do things to address these issues. I’m not a policymaker, I’m just some jackass sitting at a computer. A government with vision could make strides.

        And to my initial point, a government that could build political bridges with the provinces would be even more effective.