Absolutely.
Thanks for the opportunity, Mr. Chair.
The “financialization” of housing is a word we hear a lot. The reality in Canada is that about 95% of the rental market is provided by the private sector, so financialization is something that exists by design in our rental market. In an environment of a growing population and more demand for more rental units, we need more financialization in order to get more supply to meet the needs of a growing population.
We've done some work in our rental market survey to try to measure the extent to which REITs and other types of investors are present in the market. Our best estimate is that REITs account for about 10% to 15% of landlords in the rental market. They're not a monopoly; they're a smallish player. They're a player amongst other private investors, which make up, as I said, the ownership of most of the rental units in the rental markets across the country.
To the extent that units are being scooped up, I don't think they're being scooped up from private sector investors buying them away from the government. It is maybe private sector owners selling to other private sector owners.
The market is overwhelmingly privately owned in Canada. There is a role for the government, of course, as well. That's just the way our system is designed and how we supply housing. We could always entertain ways of changing those proportions, but that's how it is right now.