Yes, certainly.
Look, I think it's important to recognize that there are no silver bullets. There's no simple solution. It's going to be a number of small, incremental policies that can move the needle, but there's certainly some low-hanging fruit there.
I would say that the move towards a national beneficial ownership registry is a welcome move, and there's no reason to delay that. It's understood that we have a problem. We have a fairly porous border as it relates to international capital. We don't want to be a welcoming jurisdiction for anyone globally to park money here. We need to know who's owning these properties. Frankly, the creation of that registry would dissuade a lot of that capital flow. That's one.
The other thing I would suggest is that we look at a scaled down payment model for multiple properties. Right now, if you buy a second property in Canada, you need to put 20% down at a minimum. There's no reason it couldn't be 35% for the third one and 50% for the fourth one. We'd just scale up, because ultimately what we have right now is that people who are already in the market have access to housing equity, and that becomes the source down payment for multiple property acquisitions. It's very difficult for newcomers who are trying to get into the market. That's another.
The third I would point to is that we have a problem with mortgage fraud in Canada. I would encourage all the members to look at the CBC documentary from last year related to this. It's well known within the industry.
There is a simple, elegant solution here. Mortgage Professionals Canada has advocated for it in their submission. It's just to streamline direct income verification between lenders and the CRA. It's just a simple yes/no verifying of line 15000 on the notice of assessment. It's been live in the U.S. for 20 years. There's no reason we can't verify income directly from CRA. The mortgage industry is begging for it. When an industry's begging for regulation to weed out bad actors, we should listen to them.
Those are three off of the top of my head. We could go on, but I could follow up off-line.