The biggest worry for me is the debt of Ontario. My biggest election issue is the debt.
What about the rest of you?
What about the rest of you?
The biggest worry for me is the debt of Ontario. My biggest election issue is the debt.
What about the rest of you?
biggest concern for me is a dieing economy
Ontario now receives federal equalization payments
we have become a have not province
the auto industry is on it's last gasps
and there has been NOTHING done to replace the lost jobs
get the economy chugging again and revenues will rise
Housing affordability and transit.
I spoke to my neighbour. He said magna is looking to move out of Ontario. Large increase in costs and labour along with Trump rhetoric is making US more appealing.
He is the sole provider of his family and worries about his future.
Debt seems like such an abstract concept when it's at the scales it is now. The US national debt is something like $20-trillion; does anyone really care anymore?
Unfunded liabilities worry me more because they're "real" and coming due as the population ages and begins demanding their pensions and long-term care and so on. People aren't just looking for interest on their investment in a stable democracy (as is generally the case with debt); they're looking for far more vast sums of money as they start drawing pensions as income and needing more healthcare etc.
Cities and states and perhaps even provinces declare bankruptcy because of unfunded liabilities, not because of "debt" per se.
The debt bothers me because it shows how stupid people are when they think the government can reduce hydro or insurance rates. Al the government does is subsidize the rates. Guess who pays?
biggest concern for me is a dieing economy
Ontario now receives federal equalization payments
we have become a have not province
the auto industry is on it's last gasps
and there has been NOTHING done to replace the lost jobs
get the economy chugging again and revenues will rise
Transit can obviously be easily addressed (or not) by the government, but what ideas are you looking for that will help housing affordability? I find most meddling in housing just makes things worse and wonder if there are some good ideas out there.
They could do something with land transfer tax, but that's not a huge barrier, if that's what breaks affordability the dwelling was unaffordable to begin with.
Some condo buildings are being constructed with low-income units (although in the ones I have seen, they are entirely separated with their own entrance which I think is uncool). It would be interesting to see how things would work out if ~5 units per building were sold to TCH (funded by selling off uber-expensive and maintenance intensive detached housing stock). Integration normally improves society.
I would love to see the principal residence tax exemption capped (say at $1,000,000 and indexed to inflation). I think that's a federal problem though. That lets people make some decent money while preventing people from grossly overhousing to grow money tax free. Depending on what tax rate was applied, this could actually bring a lot of properties back to market as it could be advantageous to rent and invest the money in securities or commercial real estate.
Honestly, I'm unsure how the government can fix it and I'm not an expert in housing. For the time being, what I really want is an understanding of the root causes of the issues, as well as the regulatory and economic environments that are creating it. Not every big city in the world suffers from the issues that Toronto suffers from; I'd be happy with a look at comparable cities (both US and EU) and an in depth analysis of what it is that enables their real estate prices to be lower.
The natural comparison for me is Chicago. Similar sized city and a major US financial hub, but has far more affordable housing stock.
They said if Wynne were elected again, they would move. And they said that in 2016.I spoke to my neighbour. He said magna is looking to move out of Ontario. Large increase in costs and labour along with Trump rhetoric is making US more appealing.
He is the sole provider of his family and worries about his future.
I spoke to my neighbour. He said magna is looking to move out of Ontario. Large increase in costs and labour along with Trump rhetoric is making US more appealing.
He is the sole provider of his family and worries about his future.
Servicing the national debt is just the age old game of kicking the can down the line. It's one of those shrug-the-shoulders-let-the-next-gen-worry-about-it kinda deal.
What I think is more pressing is housing debt: over-leveraged mortgages, tapped-out HELOCs.
More than 15% the of the Canadian economy is tied to real-estate and related services: construction, financial institutions, insurance companies, real estate agents, lawyers, home inspection, etc.
In addition to this, the housing boom has created a "wealth effect", people borrow heavily from their ever-rising home equity to buy cars and trucks, renovate, go on vacations, eat out at restaurants. Housing is driving the red-hot domestic economy. Because they're secure in the fact that whatever they're borrowing will easily be repaid when their house is worth 10% more the next year, and the next.
It's a house (pardon the pun) of cards that is just waiting to fold. We can't keep interest rates low forever. The minute rates rise and people can't afford to keep up with mortgage payments, cars won't be bought, vacations won't be taken, renovations won't be done. Defaults on mortgages will affect FIs, decreasing home prices will have a reverse wealth effect and it'll take down the Canadian economy with it. Unemployment will rise, causing even more hardship servicing mortgage and HELOC debt.
This is the debt that needs to be addressed. Not some random number called the "national debt" that people have been throwing around for generations, and will continue to do so for generations after us.
This is partially the reason im worried about the impact of this wealth that’s locked up in real estate. Lots of people that have very average salaries suddenly found themselves sitting on a pile of money, thought themselves financial geniuses and started balling out. When you look at housing prices to wage multiples you realize very quickly that without help from previous generations, the current generation cant really afford their lifestyles should something happen. It may not happen today or tomorrow, but eventually we’ll have to pay the piper...
The biggest worry I have is the sustained strength of our economy. I worry that the staggering losses of well paying long term manufacturing jobs have hollowed the economy and made it fragile. I worry that employment growth in Ontario has mostly been from government expansion of the civil sector, gov't infrastructure spending, and a sugar high from a red hot residential construction market. In the past, low Canadian dollar and the strong American economy created billions in trade surpluses -- no more, were not making as many things today, so there is less to export. The changes in balance of trade might be the canary in the coal mine - the canary ain't singing today.The biggest worry for me is the debt of Ontario. My biggest election issue is the debt.
What about the rest of you?