Rental Housing in the 2012 Federal Budget August 2011 John Dickie
President Rental Housing - Canada’s Neglected Industry And why that neglect is bad for Canadians Canadian public policy discriminates against the rental housing industry[1] . This is bad for Canadians for a number of reasons, namely:
Recommendations The government of Canada needs to end its discrimination against the rental housing industry, to allow the industry to create new rental buildings, and more housing opportunities for Canadians, while generating more tax revenue. The following changes would be an important start toward turning around the situation:
The Canadian Federation of Apartment Associations represents the owners and managers of close to one million rental suites across Canada through 17 local and provincial apartment associations. We are the sole national voice of the for-profit rental housing Less government revenue The need for the reforms we propose arises largely from the divergence in the current tax treatment of homeowners from the tax treatment of renters.
Canada’s governments lose out from rental decline because the taxes on rental housing are much higher than the taxes on owner-occupied homes. In contrast, continued inflation and the exemption of owner-occupied housing from capital gains taxation has provided increased tax advantages to owner-occupiers. Higher government costs Due to the revisions of the Income Tax Act over the last four decades, the tax treatment of residential rental properties is much less positive than it was. This has led the rate of rental housing development to decline dramatically in Canada, relative to the population and population growth. The rate of purpose-built rental development in Canada has fallen far behind the rate in the United States. That decline in rental housing development has led to calls for direct government investment to build rental housing in the form of social and non-profit housing. Such housing is even more likely than private ownership housing to tie residents to their current housing, and thus prevent them from following job opportunities. That has negative implications for the In addition, governments lack the fiscal capacity which would be needed to supply housing along with governments’ core functions. More unemployment and other labour market effects As first identified by economist Andrew J. Oswald, an increase in home ownership results in an increase in the rate of unemployment. As Oswald wrote in 1999, In the period from 1950 to 1960, most European nations had low owner-occupation rates and low unemployment rates. The United States then had relatively high owner-occupation of 60%. At that time the US had the highest unemployment rate in the industrialized world. [Since then] unemployment rates have risen most quickly in the nations with the fastest growth in home ownership. … [N]ations where many people rent have less joblessness than nations where home-ownership is the norm. … The link between housing and jobs appears to hold [4] Numerous other economists have confirmed the Oswald effect. The cause of the increase in unemployment appears to be primarily the immobility that home ownership creates for home owners in the labour force. Simply put, it costs much more to move when you are a home owner than when you are a renter. Besides higher unemployment, Oswald suggests that there are other negative effects of higher rates of homeownership. Homeowners tend to commute much longer distances to work than renters. That increases traffic congestion and raises the costs of moving people and goods across cities, and in and out of cities. In addition, “in an economy in which people are immobile, workers do jobs for which they are not ideally suited. This inefficiency is harmful to everyone: it raises costs of production and lowers real incomes in a country. … Jobs get destroyed -- or more precisely priced out of existence -- by such inefficiencies.”[5] Housing choice The current tax position means that Canada’s housing markets are not providing the housing opportunities in the rental sector needed by households with low and moderate incomes, and by people who move between cities. Rental ownership is ideal for someone moving to a city with which they are unfamiliar. The new resident can move somewhere convenient to their employment. Then as the first year unfolds, they can learn where to access the schools, churches, and city amenities which suit them; how the city’s traffic works; and decide where they want to live for the long term. After a one year lease they can move to an new area and try it out. Before committing to homeownership with its substantial in and out costs, the new resident can decide if they want to stay in the new city and in what area. Rental housing allows people more mobility and choice than they have with home ownership.
Rental housing costs less than owner occupied homes because:
As well, low-income Canadians are often not well served by home ownership. Home ownership comes with up-front costs which they can ill afford. Home ownership tends to penalize people who move more often then once every five years, whereas low-income people need to be able to follow job opportunities. That mobility is reduced by the obligations and risks of home ownership. RECOMMENDATIONS A solution to all of these various problems is to re-engage the private sector in building and operating additional purpose-built rental housing. Private sector re-engagement will require a reduction in the effective tax rates on rental housing. However, in the medium and long term, such reductions should not require government revenue reductions, since rental housing pays income tax and capital gains tax, whereas owner-occupied housing does not. Such reforms will also reduce the need for direct government expenditures, currently aimed at addressing the short-falls in private sector development. 1. Allow Rollovers Owners of business property benefit from a rollover, which means that if, for example, a print shop sells its building and buys a larger building, the tax system recognizes that the owner has reinvested the proceeds of sale in a replacement asset, and the owner does not have any money to pay tax on the gain on the first property. The tax on the gain will be paid, but only when the gain is realized when the proceeds are not reinvested in a similar asset (at which time the business person has the funds to pay the tax). Currently the rollover Allowing a rollover (i.e. a tax deferral) on rental property sale and reinvestment would:
The rollover cost is reasonable The government revenues that would be deferred by the rollover proposal in the first year after implementation are approximately $450 million. In the years that follow the first year, the direct deferral amount should decrease given that taxes payable (deferred from the first and subsequent years) would appear as added taxes payable thereafter. Besides that, the increase in transactions would generate increases in economic activity and thus higher taxes on that activity. Over time, the deferral “cost” would decrease toward zero, while the economic benefits would quickly make the overall impact on government revenue positive. 2. Increase the Capital Cost Allowance (CCA) As is well known, buildings tend to wear out over time. Consequently, besides the out-of-pocket expenses of operating a building, the deterioration of the building is also an expense. Accountants call that expense depreciation. For tax purposes, the expense is recognized by allowing owners to deduct a capital cost allowance (CCA) from their net income. When the CCA rate is low that raises a landlord’s net income, which increases his or her taxes, and makes the business less attractive. On the other hand, when the CCA rate is high that reduces a landlord’s net income, which decreases his or her taxes, and makes the business more attractive. Until the late 1970’s, the CCA rate on wood-frame construction in Canada was 10%, as compared with 5% for concrete construction. Then the wood frame rate was reduced to 5%. In 1988 the CCA rate was reduced from 5% to 4% for all buildings acquired after 1988. Both reductions made investment in rental housing less attractive. Here is a comparison between the CCA allowed under the current Canadian system and the system used in Germany in the 1990s, when Germany had a healthy rental housing sector which was seeing new development.
CFAA's recommendation is for the general CCA rate on residential rental properties to be raised to 6%, or failing that, for the rate for concrete construction to be raised to 5% and the rate for wood-frame construction to be raised to 6%[7] . 3. Restore the deductibility of soft costs to directly incentivize rental construction In the late 1970s and early 1980s the deductibility of soft costs was dramatically reduced in Canada. That had a chilling effect on rental construction. Soft cost deductibility should be restored, both for those whose business is rental real estate, and for people for whom it is not their primary business (who are often an efficient source of financing for rental housing.) [1] Government Subsidies to Homeowners versus Renters in Ontario and Canada, Frank A. Clayton, August 30, 2010, available at http://cfaa-fcapi.org/pd2/CFAA_FRPO_Govt_Sub.pdf . [2]The chart shows figures for Ontario. The Canada wide figures are very similar. [3] The operating profit on rental housing is equivalent to the impute income owner-occupiers enjoy free of tax. [4] Andrew J. Oswald, “The Housing Market and Europe’s Unemployment: A Non-Technical Paper, available at http://www2.warwick.ac.uk/fac/soc/economics/staff/academic/oswald/homesnt.pdf, p. 3 (August 11, 2011). [5]ibid, p. 4. [6]For more details, see “Tax Deferral on reinvestment - Facts and Recommendations”, CFAA, September 2008 available at http://www.cfaa-fcapi.org/pdf/CFAA_Tax_deferral_facts_0809.pdf. [7]In 2005 Fisher, Smith, Stern and Webb found that, with a 2% inflation rate, the depreciation rate on residential rental property required to equal the average actual depreciation is 5.25%: “Analysis of Economic Depreciation for Multi-Family Property”, JRER Vol. 27, No. 4. At less than 5.25% the CCA rate does not reflect the landlord’s costs. A higher rate would be needed to provide actual stimulus for rental housing construction. |