Quote:
Originally Posted by chowhou
I actually have no idea where this 1.3M number comes from, we generally are targetting 500k permanent entries per year. It just might be the case that that's the rate we require to maintain our standard of living (or prevent it from reducing faster).
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Again, you're looking strictly at immigrants entering through the permanent resident program, but ignoring that the significant majority of entrants to Canada are now coming through the student, TFW, or refugee streams.
Our population growth in 2022 for example was ~1 million, of which ~950,000 of those new residents came via immigration. Of those 950,000, only 430,000 were PRs. The full 2023 data is not available yet, but we're on track for somewhere in the range of 1.5 million new residents (with the population
growing by 430,000 in Q3 alone), despite only 450,000 PRs expected.
This is also a quite a departure from our recent past, when PRs comprised more in the range of >80% of all entrants to Canada. In other words, looking at the number of permanent residents arriving each year is an (increasingly) inaccurate proxy for total growth.
Quote:
Originally Posted by chowhou
You're very dumb if you think that development of additional homes in our cities is even close to legal.
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This is a weird take. Developing new homes is obviously not illegal given the massive amounts of development happening in all cities across the country right now. I'm assuming you're alluding to zoning restrictions, which until recently in most cities restricted more than a single unit per lot on the majority of lots (though nowhere near 99%, more like 60-80% depending on the city); though these have also been loosened quite significantly in many cities in various stages over the past few years. None of our largest cities have any 1-unit/lot zoning anymore.
In any case though, even if zoning regulations were eliminated entirely & immediately, that still doesn't address how all the necessary new housing would actually be
built. Making it easier to proposed new housing is great, but approvals are only one small part of the process - material, capital, and labour are needed to actually get them built; and those are all the things that are much harder to scale up (and to do so takes time & money - it can't happen overnight).