Yes. Thank you very much, Chair.
I would like to thank you very much for having me here today to talk about the housing challenges Canada is facing, what CMHC is doing to help today and what we see as the path forward.
We at CMHC are seeing two distinct but connected housing crises.
There’s a crisis for the most vulnerable—people who are struggling to have even their basic housing needs met because of a lack of affordable, or social, housing, and insufficient income supports.
Meanwhile, there’s also an affordability crisis for middle‑income people, who are finding it increasingly difficult to afford market housing. The separate crises are connected by the fact that housing exists on a continuum.
People who can’t afford to buy a home will stay in the rental space longer. That makes renting more expensive for those trying to transition out of social housing and into the market. That, in turn, makes the social-housing wait list longer, which has an impact on homelessness.
If we're going to achieve housing affordability in this country, we will need an across-the-board increase in housing supply. We will need more market housing, particularly purpose-built rental homes, as well as more social and affordable housing.
We need much more housing, in fact. Our research at CMHC has found that to reach affordability by the year 2030, Canada will need to build an additional 3.5 million homes, which is beyond what the country's already on track to produce.
Reaching affordability will take a whole-of-government approach. CMHC, as Canada's national housing agency, plays a very important role, of course. Our work complements that of Infrastructure Canada, which is the department responsible for leading housing policy. The strengthened partnership with Infrastructure Canada will ensure that investments in housing leverage existing infrastructure. In addition, the recently announced GST exemptions for rental construction and the increase in the Canada mortgage bond limits are under the purview of Finance Canada. These two measures will also support the expansion of our housing stock.
That said, the federal government does not have access to all of the levers that control housing affordability. Many of them are in the jurisdiction of provincial, territorial and municipal governments, which are responsible for things like land use policies, permitting and tenant-landlord relations. The main approaches available to the federal government are to encourage and incentivize the other orders of government to make housing a priority.
The biggest player, in our view, is really the private sector. The private sector provides the vast majority of housing in Canada. We need private sector capital, so governments need to create the conditions necessary to attract that investment in housing.
However, the private sector won't be able to just buy Canada out of this situation. Skilled labour shortages in the construction sector mean that Canada does not have the human capacity to close the supply gap. Canada needs to boost productivity in the construction sector, partly by encouraging innovation and fixing supply chain issues. We can't keep building houses the way we have for decades.
In conclusion, I'd like to state that what's really important in this space is partnerships with the private sector, other orders of government, the non-profit sector and indigenous communities. We truly need all hands on deck.
Fortunately, the national housing strategy was designed very much with this in mind. Collaboration is built into many of its initiatives, but we need to do more and we need to go further. The national housing strategy has made significant progress since it was launched in 2017, but it was not, even at that time, intended to be the sole solution to our housing challenges.
I'm pleased to be here today to work very closely with this committee on how we can go further as a country to address our housing affordability challenges.
On one last note, as members of this committee may already be aware, I will be leaving CMHC in December this year to pursue an opportunity at the International Monetary Fund. It has been the privilege of my life to serve as the CEO of CMHC and to work with a very dedicated and committed group of employees.
I would also like to acknowledge the dedication of the people on this committee and to thank you for your attention to housing in Canada.
Thank you.