There is a great deal of ambiguity about what the accelerator fund is intended to do. In CMHC's consultation, they said that “Everyone [in Canada] deserves to have a safe and affordable place to call home.” They said they needed to remove barriers to housing supply and wanted to offer options for renters to become homeowners. It's very much around this question of appealing to the middle class and asking whether our kids can afford to buy a home.
I think, to a large extent, it was politically motivated. It's a good political response, as opposed to a good policy response on helping young families get into home ownership. At the same time, they want “to remove barriers and help municipalities build [more] housing more quickly in an ambitious and innovative manner.”
Here in Ottawa, we saw housing starts go up last year by 58%. It was a very significant response. Some municipalities have been able to significantly accelerate what they're doing and build more homes, but simply accelerating and expanding the supply hasn't affected prices.
There is this need to reflect on the objective of the accelerator funds: Is it to improve affordability, or is it simply to expand supply and hope that as a consequence of supply that will result in greater affordability? In basic economics, that should happen. The problem with the housing market is that homes are fixed in location and certain neighbourhoods have very high values. When I walk around Ottawa, people are knocking down 1960's homes selling for $500,000 or $600,000, and building a duplex and selling each side for $1.4 million. We're doubling the number of units, but we're doubling the price at the same time.
I don't think anybody has really articulated, and perhaps this committee should, the objective of the accelerator fund. What are we really trying to achieve and what outcome measures are we going to put in place to make sure we achieve it?