Thank you, Mr. Chair, for inviting me to this important discussion.
In my work as an academic and a researcher in this area, a number of my studies have been cited by other witnesses, particularly around the very dramatic erosion of the low-end rental stock, with a loss of over 550,000 units in the decade of 2011 to 2021, at a time when we only built about 70,000 units of new affordable housing. The loss of existing stock is a critical issue, and that's being lost as a result of the rents moving above affordable levels.
I've submitted a brief to the committee. I don't know whether it's been translated and circulated. I'll simply highlight some of the key points in that brief, which discusses the issue of financialization as well as the state of the rental market and the issues creating the affordability crisis in rental housing.
The analysis revealed that the issues contributing to the ongoing phenomenon of rent-gouging and renovictions, and the dramatic ongoing erosion of these lower-rent options, are pervasive and relate to a wide range of investors, of which REITs are a very small fraction. In fact, as other witnesses have indicated, REITs manage and operate less than 5% of all rental housing in the country.
The behaviours have more to do with the transformation of rental housing into an attractive asset class, which is attracting investment both from large institutional investors as well as many small investors.
Really, the increasing issues are related to an insufficient supply of rental housing, which is a long-term phenomenon in this country. This is being exacerbated by a very significant increase in demand, especially from international students and temporary foreign workers. These are over and above the immigration targets. There is also pent-up demand from young families seeking to purchase a home. Because of prices and macroprudential policies, they can't afford to buy and, as a consequence, they remain in the rental market. We've seen a significant reduction in the home ownership rate in this country as a result of them being unable to move out, create vacancies and create a healthier rental market.
The other key issue relates to provincial regulations of the rental market allowing vacancy decontrol, which is the feature allowing these significant increases in rent. I think that's an issue, obviously, of provincial jurisdiction, but it's one the committee needs to think about.
In terms of the recommendations in the paper, the first one relates to vacancy decontrol and its impact. The recommendation is to request that the provinces revise current rent regulations to, at least temporarily, remove the vacancy decontrol mechanism to moderate the excessive increases in rents while new construction catches up to these historically high levels of immigration creating these pressures. While this is provincial jurisdiction, there is a precedent for this. In 1975, under the anti-inflationary measures, the federal government asked the provinces to adopt rent regulation, and they all did. Subsequently, those regulations were relaxed once the issue had passed. It has been done before.
The second recommendation, given that most acquisitions of existing properties are by various types of investors utilizing CMHC mortgage insurance, is that the committee suggest CMHC establish more stringent conditions to limit rent increases for investors utilizing mortgage insurance to purchase existing lower-rent properties.
The third recommendation relates to the changing pattern of institutional investors and REITs in the residential rental market. Historically, these investors purchased existing assets because they were priced better and had less risk than building new. Recently, many of these investors have moved to new construction. Therefore, rather than eliminating REITs and institutional investors, we should try to direct their investment into the new supply part of the market, encouraging a pivot that's already ongoing towards that nature of investment.
The fourth recommendation is to encourage institutional investors and pension funds —which offer to invest via REITs and other asset management firms—to update and review their ESG investment guidelines to minimize enabling the practice of renovictions and large rent increases in properties in their portfolios. Michael Brooks spoke about an industry code of conduct to address this issue in previous hearings.
The fifth recommendation is that the government amend the national housing strategy to create a funding and financing mechanism that would allow non-profit organizations to purchase existing lower-rent units. By taking them out of the market system, they could de-commodify those assets and preserve the lower rents in perpetuity. This would also take advantage of a desire among the REITs to dispose of some existing lower-rent assets, which I think Dan Dixon will speak about later. That creates a mutual opportunity both to preserve and to take the proceeds from those sales to invest in new construction.
The sixth recommendation is to encourage Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada to review and recalibrate the issuance of international student visas and temporary foreign worker permits to better align with new rental supply and to direct the CMHC to utilize its low financing rental construction financing initiative to encourage and support the construction of purpose-built student housing that would take some of the pressure off the market and the displacement that occurs due to the high number of international students entering the country.
I look forward to the discussion.
Thank you very much.