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Originally Posted by whatnext
I don't feel screwed over, I've got my house in Vancouver. I would have liked that one a it more, but that's life. I do feel bad for the younger people who will never be able to afford a house in Vancouver...for no valid economic reason
By that I mean there is nothing in Vancouver's economic fundamentals that has changed over 12 years to justify so many local wage earners being priced out of housing. Have we suddenly aquired a whole lot of high-paying jobs in banking? Record low interest rates do not explain the meteoric rise in prices. I'm sorry people get offended by having the obvious being pointed out. Any good realtor can tell you where the buyers are coming from, why pretend it's not a factor? That governments don't do a better job of monitoring so the facts can be out there in black and white is inexplicable.
It also surprises me that those who get all outraged about suburban sprawl don't see the cause and effect at work - if you can't afford a home for your family in Vancouver/Richmond/Burnaby you get pushed out to farther suburbs. Take a look at the demographic of those driving the rapid development of Langley and South Surrey.
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I have met quite a lot of people from overseas (not China specifically, but all over) who live in Vancouver renting units because my wife is from overseas. The thing that struck me is when I met them, her friends, etc., every single one of them when they asked where I was from and I said "Vancouver" said and I quote:
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Wow I've been here 2-5 years, and you're the first person I've met actually FROM Vancouver
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Every single one.
My response was always... "That's because we all live out in the suburbs where we can afford to live."
Now obviously my experiences are not backed by actual statistics, but it just always struck me how true it is and what you said above regarding natives of the area being simply priced out of Vancouver and into the suburbs.
When we went to purchase our townhouse to move up to a 3 bedroom from a 1 bedroom, we looked everywhere. We both combined qualify for a very large mortgage but we also want to live, be able to take vacations, buy a car, and not simply spend the next 25 years, working every day simply to pay off our mortgage then 25 year later realizing we missed 1/4 to 1/3rd of our life.
After determining that, and we actually own 2 other places so we're not "new to the market", the result was we could only buy in Surrey/Langley to remain comfortable.
We looked at places on Cambie for example not far from Oakridge. The townhouses were exactly the same as the one we ended up purchasing in Surrey Central, was the same size, same basically everything including finishing. Only difference was location. Surrey Central vs Oakridge Center.
Oakridge Center townhouse? $950,000
Surrey Central townhouse? $360,000
That to me is outrageous as a region. Is living in Oakridge and Vancouver worth an extra almost $600,000? For those keeping tab, with that extra $600,000 out here in Surrey we could have not only purchased the townhouse, but a nice 5 bedroom 5-10 year old home in a great neighborhood AND the townhouse at the same time.
I quite frankly find that just a bit insane.