canada’s new housing minister gregor robertson says that the prices of existing homes
shouldn’t go down, lest this negatively impact current homeowners, and that affordable housing should be provided through massive government subsidies instead. his position is economically illiterate and raises concerns about his fitness to lead this portfolio.
anyone with a cursory understanding of economics knows that, in a regular market, the price of any given commodity will be roughly the same for both the buyer and seller. if you want people to have the option of purchasing $3 coffee, for example, you need cafes that are willing to sell coffee for $3 as well. while these dynamics are sometimes distorted — i.e. through taxes and subsidies — this is, for the most part, how transactions work.
so if you want the canadian housing market to become more affordable for buyers, it naturally follows that sellers will have to accept lower prices, which, for existing homeowners, means that the value of their properties must decline. this is an obvious point that is well-understood
throughout the political spectrum.
yet, on his first day on the job, upon being asked whether prices need to go down, robertson
said “no” and advocated for delivering more government-subsidized “affordable housing” instead. he later
clarified on x that his opposition is rooted in the fact that, for most canadians, their current home “is their most valuable asset.”