this post was submitted on 08 Jan 2025
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Your own source disagrees with you:
And the conclusion is:
Which I fully agree with. As the report shows, in recent years Vienna has also failed to keep up with demand. Vienna isn't perfect, but if their model is actually followed, and supply scales with demand, then costs can be low.
Now, do one final calculation.
How much would it cost the BC government to purchase or build 40% of the residential properties to replicate what Vienna has in terms of accommodations?
Residential properties in BC have a total value of around 1.5 TRILLION dollars in 2023. 40% of that would be $600 billion.
There is no realistic way to reach even 4% social housing in BC, let alone 40%, and that's all to achieve something that as per the article I linked, isn't actually enough to keep the market in line.
There are better options than social housing for the province to spend money on if they wish to address this problem. With the amount of money they can reasonably spend, as per my original comment, it's nothing but a lottery for poor people. It's a "look, we're doing something" which doesn't actually benefit anyone who doesn't receive a unit. The only path to affordable housing for everyone is to force ALL housing prices down, and a lottery will never impact that.
I'm sick and tired of the government spending my tax dollars on a policy which only helps a minute fraction of people. I want it to help everyone.
The cost of real property to governments is almost inconsequential. Governments can often get loans against assets at below inflation, and usually well below the increases in real estate market value. There are many cases of municipalities that bought property, then changed their plans and resold that property for a profit, even when factoring in maintenance, legal fees, and borrowing costs.