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posted by martyb on Friday September 16 2016, @03:05AM   Printer-friendly
from the for-$10K/year-I'll-make-a-house-look-lived-in dept.

Vancouver, suffering from a near-zero supply of homes available for rent, plans to slap investors sitting on vacant properties with a new tax in an effort to make housing more accessible in Canada's most-expensive property market.

The levy, which would start in January, may be as high as 2 percent of the property's assessed value, Kathleen Llewellyn-Thomas, the city's general manager of community services, told reporters Wednesday. That would mean a minimum C$20,000 ($15,000) annual payment for the typical C$1 million-plus detached home in Vancouver based on July 2015 assessment data, the most recent available.

"Vancouver is in a rental housing crisis," said Mayor Gregor Robertson, whose announcement follows a separate measure by the province in July to impose a 15 percent tax on foreign buyers. "Dangerously low vacancy rates across the city are near zero."

Vancouver is penalizing property owners for not renting empty buildings.


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  • (Score: 3, Interesting) by aristarchus on Friday September 16 2016, @07:11AM

    by aristarchus (2645) on Friday September 16 2016, @07:11AM (#402659) Journal

    There need not be any explicit arrangement, collusion can still happen through a Nash equilibrium. Fewer landlords makes it easier to do.

    I find it quite intriguing that all this shortage in real estate is brought about by two things: Canada's Commonwealth status, and, the turn over of Hong Kong to the Chinese government. So it is not a Nash equilibrium, it is a Chang equilibrium. So just cross the border! Lots of cheap real estate in Podunk, WA! You only have to worry about being surrounded by Americans, some or all of which may be carrying lethal weapons.

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  • (Score: 2) by dry on Saturday September 17 2016, @02:55AM

    by dry (223) on Saturday September 17 2016, @02:55AM (#403015) Journal

    The commonwealth status has nothing to do with it. The government has been courting the Chinese for years, even threw a World fair and then an Olympics to attract them. The idea was that if a bunch of wealthy Asians came over, they'd invest here and create jobs. We had the Hong Kong wave in the '90's and now we have the mainland China wave. People who are sneaking their money out of the country and parking it in real estate here, then they go back home and make more money.
    America would probably demand that they pay taxes so they don't go there, and of course there's the hassle of just crossing the border into America, especially with suit cases of money. America is known for not respecting property rights or the rule of law. I believe they call it civil forfeiture where they claim your property did something illegal and confiscate it.
    And of course as you say, a bunch of paranoid armed people don't make for nice neighbours.

  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Monday September 19 2016, @12:23PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday September 19 2016, @12:23PM (#403693)

    For those who want a "Vancouver experience" without the burden of bilingualism, Washington has even built a "Vancouver" of its own. It's located conveniently downstream of Hanford!