Basically, working-class people and immigrants want and should have the opportunity to earn a good wage and put that money towards a good home, but municipal and provincial governments prevent them from doing so by restricting their access to land, even though Canada has more space where there's no one than we have where there's anyone. Even though if you spread Canadians out evenly we would have more than a football field for every single Canadian, somehow we have a land shortage. That is a government failure, not a market failure.
That's the supply side. On the demand side, you are telling me that the costs of raw materials are rising. I have seen that these prices have gone up corresponding to the Bank of Canada printing unprecedented amounts of money. We have seen lumber prices go up 400%. Commodity prices are up 50%. That obviously gets baked into a house price.
Are you seeing the same inflationary pressures over the last year since the central bank started printing cash?