Budget 2022: Housing supply gets $10B boost; Feds add measures to curb speculation
TORONTO — The Liberal government will try to ease Canada’s housing crisis with more than $10 billion in funding meant to speed up home construction and repairs along with measures to cool the market and help those trying to buy their first home.
“The central challenge in Canada when it comes to housing is a lack of supply. And this budget is about tackling that head on,” said Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland in a press conference Thursday afternoon, before the government unveiled its latest federal spending plans.
Freeland has committed to doubling the number of homes built each year over the next decade to about 400,000 to help meet the 3.5 million homes the government estimates are needed by 2031, but the plans rely heavily on co-operation with other levels of government and the private sector.
“We recognize the federal government does not have all the tools to increase housing supply, so we’ve tried to be really creative and put forward ways that the federal government can work with municipalities, provinces and territories to drive housing supply,” said Freeland.