Reduce or stabilize housing prices and GDP/capita by limiting population growth and temporary residents
- Introductory Statement
- WHEREAS housing prices have rapidly increased since the Liberal government has doubled immigration to 500,000 since 2015, plus the number of temporary foreign workers and students has also increased to an estimated 2.5 million. The impact of this rapid increase in population has been a combination of higher housing prices, as demand has far exceeded supply and this is likely to continue, and as well, GDP per capita has actually been declining (while in the US it is growing rapidly), meaning that household incomes are also stagnant or likely to decline further AND WHEREAS population growth has been an important Green/environmental issue since "Limits to Growth" in the 1970s AND WHEREAS Canada's population has been growing at double the rate of ny G7 country
- Emergency Motion Statement
- BEI IT RESOLVED that the Green Party adopt a policy of reducing the the number of non-permanent residents of 2.5 million to a level under 1 million AND BE IT RESOLVED the Green Party adopt a policy of moderate population growth such as a return to moderate immigration, at or below the Harper era levels of 250,000 people per year
- Type of Emergency Motion
- Public policy that the party would represent
- Benefit
- Benefits include: Lower housing prices Increasing GDP/capita and household incomes Reduced urban sprawl Reduced CO2 emissions Reduced congestion on roads and public transit
- Who does this motion impact?
- Impacts all Canadians
- Impact on exisiting GPC policy.
- New policy.
- Green Values
-
SustainabilityEcological Wisdom
- Supporting Evidence
- Various reports and studies on the impact of the high number of temporary residents and population growth on housing, including reports prepared by banks and economics, and as well the impact of high population growth on the economy and GDP/capita by economists such as from less capital per worker
- Jurisdiction: Is this proposal under federal jurisdiction?
- Yes
- Please indicate the language the proposal is being submitted in.
- English
This proposal has been rejected because:
This motion failed to meet the 66.6% threshold of support needed to be considered as an emergency motion. Therefore, this motion was not presented for consideration by membership.
We're building a new kind of politics. One that is open, participatory, and people-powered
If you believe in what we're doing, please consider making a small donation to help us build it
Report inappropriate content
Is this content inappropriate?
Comment details
You are seeing a single comment
View all comments
Conversation with Vaalea Darkke
I agree with previous commenters Jean-Charles and Mark D'Gabriel. I'd rather prefer a motion in support of innovative/alternative housing arrangements, such as better protections/matching services for roommates/background checks, supporting programs matching students to 'lonely elderly' etc. "Golden Girls" style supporting/matching programs, and a lot more bachelor/studio construction given the growing percentages of single -person households, as part of the solution to housing issues. I'm sure there are many other innovative ways to address.
Federal jurisdiction includes immigration - which is actually shared with the provinces but the federal government has the final say.
And housing is provincial or municipal - the federal government is starting to micromanage but really can only do so by offering money as an incentive or mortgage regulation, not actual control over what gets built.
Loading comments ...