Not to mention land value. Vacant lots near me exceed "affordable" housing. The suburbs Mike mentioned are far far more. Either the houses are land-lease (fundamentally a rental that doesn't appreciate much) or they are not affordable even if tiny and cheaply finished. Something like a four storey walk up is probably the cheapest density for many locations. Even that causes issues as there needs to be a board or agency to deal with common elements. Where they are doing that in TO, each floor is a unit and they are selling for ~$1.3M per unit.
Some of the crazy price comes from the Neverending code creep. Thicker walls, more insulation, ev wiring, etc all.adds up in the bill. For many locations in Southern ontario, air conditioning is mandated so you can't do that later to save money either.
What is a reasonable ROI for an investor? GICs are ~3%. My "High interest" savings account has been renamed a General checking account because a quarter percent made the name sound ridiculous. Taxes and inflation on the ROI wipes out 5% or more for most small investors.
I was the sole owner of my company and wasn't bound by investors wanting XX% a year and an increase every year. I paid my company and personal bills and set aside a bit for the future. Life is good. However I would have needed more capital to expand and would have to go to one of the Kevin O'Learys of the world to get it. "Show me the money" and I would be in the land of slashed throats.
Blind investors are also often blind to the long term unsustainability of more, more, more.
While a benevolent investor sounds like a saint, their efforts are rarely appreciated. The minute they step aside an O'Leary takes over and reaps the rewards, usually without mercy.
Example: Someone owns a rental condo and the tenent is nice, doesn't cause problems and always pays the rent on time. The owner responds by not raising the rent to the max every year, maybe not at all.
The tenent gets lulled into the status. After ten or fifteen years the owner's situation changes and the unit gets sold to another investor or occupant.The tenent of many years wakes up to the reality of the market and is unprepared. The owner may have health issues and the nice money they left on the table would have come in handy. No one is offering them benevolence in the land of diapers and pablum.
Again, what is a reasonable ROI?
My issue is with socialism. I have no problem with social assistance but I detest social dependency. Dependency stops the thinking process
If someone drops a rock on your foot I have no problem helping out. If you drop a rock on your own foot, sorry dummy, you're on your own.
A lot of greedy billionaires were anti socialism as they grew their empires. When they reached their peaks they became benefactors able to fund large projects. Would society have been better off if they had shared a bit more on their way up?
Our political leaders do not encourage benevolence. Until we learn steet smarts, long term thinking and how brain washing works it's every man for himself.