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Raphaël's avatar

Apologies if I missed this, but isn't the "market-based" solution to developers holding onto land to make it expensive to hold onto land, i.e. increase Vancouver (and other metro regions') property taxes? Vancouver's property tax is pitifully low.

My impression is that if we want affordable housing we need to a) reduce barriers to building it (as you've described) b) increase the level of nonprofit and government housing (to compete with private sector) c) *make it expensive to not build housing*.

It's the "carrying cost" question: if it's expensive to hold onto a property, you incentivize increasing the "productivity" of that property. In the case of individual homeowners, this incentivizes them to sell earlier, rather than hold on in hopes of a windfall later on. It incentivizes developers to build more units. And a side effect is that it should incentivize individuals to stop treating property as an investment.

Instinctively, I feel like turning that sort of thing around on a dime would be catastrophic, but regular, significant increases in property taxes over time up to a point where people can still make a return on their investment in land, but one that is lesser than, for example, investing in productive assets, would help the housing crisis so, so much. And it would have the side effect of boosting industries, since people would focus their investments there.

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