Politicians point fingers on housing crisis, but calls growing for more co-operation
OTTAWA — Calls for co-ordinated action across levels of government to address Canada’s housing crisis are growing as affordability deteriorates and the country risks falling even further behind on building more homes.
As it stands, Canada is not on track to build the 3.5 million additional homes — on top of the current pace of building — that the federal housing agency says are needed to restore affordability by 2030.
During a roundtable interview with The Canadian Press last week, officials from the Canada Mortgage Housing Corporation said reversing this trend will require a “Team Canada” approach, in which all levels of government co-operate to address the shortage.
And while the officials’ proposed solutions — building denser cities, incentivizing private investment in housing and boosting public investment in social housing — are shared by many housing experts, no one has yet presented a plan for executing these ambitious changes across levels of government.