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Will a Ban on Foreign Real Estate Buyers Lower House Prices?

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Hovering actual property costs, the second hottest matter of dialog amongst Canadians after the climate, loomed massive within the federal finances offered to Parliament on Thursday by Chrystia Freeland, the finance minister and deputy prime minister.

Over the 2 years ending in February, the typical home worth elevated by greater than 51 p.c, to 868,400 Canadian {dollars}, based on the Canadian Actual Property Affiliation.

Among the many big selection of finances proposals aimed toward making housing extra inexpensive is a two-year ban that may block most foreigners and non-Canadian corporations from shopping for residential actual property within the nation.

The concept that international cash has helped push up costs in markets like Vancouver and Toronto has been round for a while and has change into a scorching political subject.

And there have been efforts to discourage it. In 2016, British Columbia launched a 15 p.c tax on house and rental purchases by international patrons. Late final month, Ontario raised its personal tax to twenty p.c and prolonged it to cowl the complete province.

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However a number of economists I spoke with after the finances’s launch have stated the impact of international patrons on costs just isn’t as vital as many individuals could imagine, even in Vancouver and Toronto. And a few of the consultants warn that the ban will most probably create complications of its personal — maybe huge ones.

Tsur Somerville is an affiliate professor at Sauder College of Enterprise, College of British Columbia, who focuses on actual property economics. He instructed me that the housing worth improve that came about in the course of the pandemic contradicts the assumptions underlying this ban.

“We’ve had two years when it’s been very onerous to be a international purchaser of actual property in Canada as a result of it’s been onerous to get right here,” he stated. “But that is when home costs have had their largest improve during the last 10 years.”

Analysis by Professor Somerville and a colleague revealed that after British Columbia imposed its tax, costs fell by simply 3 to five p.c in Vancouver neighborhoods that had been in style with international patrons in contrast with neighborhoods such patrons averted.

In a paper revealed in 2020, Joshua C. Gordon, an adjunct professor within the College of Public Coverage at Simon Fraser College in Burnaby, British Columbia, discovered that demand from individuals exterior of Canada has certainly made housing much less inexpensive in Vancouver and Toronto, however not in a means the finances’s gross sales ban will tackle.

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Many actual property purchases in these cities, he wrote, are made by residents or residents of Canada appearing on behalf of kinfolk or different individuals residing abroad, who present the cash behind the offers. No matter kind the brand new ban takes, it is not going to block such transactions.

“What issues just isn’t a lot citizenship however somewhat the supply of funds for actual property purchases,” Mr. Gordon wrote.

Particulars are scarce about how the federal ban will work. The Division of Finance instructed me that they “can be accessible within the coming months.” The finances says that leisure properties can be exempt, though it doesn’t outline them; it additionally exempts individuals in Canada on scholar visas that result in everlasting residency, and folks quickly residing right here for work.

However provided that actual property is a provincial duty, it’s unclear precisely how the federal authorities can regulate such gross sales. Gilles LeVasseur, who teaches constitutional legislation on the College of Ottawa, stated that the rules will most probably be created as a part of the fed’s powers to create prison legislation.

However whatever the means, he stated, the rule will run afoul of the Constitution of Rights and Freedoms by discriminating towards individuals on the idea of nationality. Whereas rights usually are not absolute, Professor LeVasseur stated that it might be tough for the federal government to justify such discrimination in court docket.

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“Is that this acceptable given the truth that it’s going to penalize a sure group of individuals figuring out that it’s not going to have a serious influence on the society?” Professor LeVasseur requested.

I additionally spoke with Brian Higgins, a U.S. consultant from western New York State who retains a detailed eye on cross-border points. He stated he’s been expecting a doable ban since final fall, and has raised the difficulty with officers in Washington and through a gathering with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.

The finances proposal, he stated, goes too far.

“It violates the U.S.-Canada-Mexico Commerce Settlement” by discriminating towards American and Mexican patrons, he stated.

Professor Somerville was not crucial of the finances’s many home worth measures, however he stated that would-be patrons in Canada who discover themselves priced out of the market shouldn’t get their hopes up that a lot will change.

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“It all the time appears like everybody needs some magic answer that comes for gratis to them and makes housing inexpensive,” he stated, including, not wholly severely: “The best way to make housing inexpensive is to chop housing costs by 50 p.c. However that type of results in a few different issues within the macro economic system.”


After I’m reporting in Western Canada, I often have the nice fortune to work with Amber Bracken, a photojournalist from Edmonton. This week the picture above, which was shot whereas we had been reporting on the invention of human stays on the former Kamloops Indian Residential College, was named World Press Picture of the Yr, one of many highest honors in her occupation.

“It’s a type of picture that sears itself into your reminiscence; it evokes a type of sensory response,” Rena Effendi, the worldwide jury chair, stated in regards to the picture. “I may virtually hear the quietness on this {photograph}, a quiet second of world reckoning for the historical past of colonization, not solely in Canada however around the globe.”


  • Within the newest of a collection of measures to prop up ailing media corporations in Canada, the federal authorities launched a invoice that may pressure tech giants like Fb, Google and Twitter to pay for permitting customers to share information content material on their platforms. It follows related strikes in Europe and Australia.

  • A Steller’s sea eagle, native to East Asia, that confirmed up in Nova Scotia on April Fools’ Day isn’t misplaced; it’s adapting, Marion Renault writes in an article about avian vagrants.

  • Noah Reid, the 34-year-old “Schitt’s Creek” star, will make his Broadway debut this month in Tracy Letts’s new comedy “The Minutes.”

  • The chief govt of Mavrik Company, a Montreal-based funding firm, is aboard a spaceship that lifted off for the Worldwide Area Station on Friday in NASA’s first foray into area tourism.


A local of Windsor, Ontario, Ian Austen was educated in Toronto, lives in Ottawa and has reported about Canada for The New York Occasions for the previous 16 years. Observe him on Twitter at @ianrausten.

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TVLine Items: Natasha Rothwell’s How to Die Alone Release Date, Macy’s Fireworks Ratings and More

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TVLine Items: Natasha Rothwell’s How to Die Alone Release Date, Macy’s Fireworks Ratings and More


‘How to Die Alone’ Release Date, Natasha Rothwell Hulu Comedy



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Brazil's leftist president concerned Biden can't beat Trump: 'I think Biden has a problem'

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Brazil's leftist president concerned Biden can't beat Trump: 'I think Biden has a problem'

President Biden is now facing calls from members of the international community who want him to quit the 2024 presidential race, with even leftist Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva warning that “Biden has a problem.”

“He’s moving more slowly, he is taking longer to answer questions,” Lula explained to a local radio station, according to Bloomberg. “The U.S. elections are very important for all the world.” 

Biden’s first presidential debate against former President Trump last month proved to be a debacle, leading Biden to admit just days later that he “screwed up.” 

“I had a bad night,” Biden, 81, said Thursday in an interview with radio host Earl Ingram. “And the fact of the matter is that, you know, I screwed up.” 

DEMOCRATIC CONGRESSMAN CALLS OUT ‘ARROGANT’ BIDEN CAMPAIGN RESPONSE TO DEBATE FALLOUT

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While Republicans predictably criticized the performance, even Democrats have fallen into a panic, and the president has had to hold crisis talks with close allies to reassure them he’s still up to the job — and will be for another four years. 

Former President Trump and President Biden debate in Atlanta on June 27.  (Getty Images)

The debate, however, sent shock waves through the international community, with some allies refusing to stay quiet about an issue that they see as being too important to treat delicately. 

Matteo Renzi, who served as Italian prime minister from 2014 to 2016 and who proved to be a close friend to Democrats during his tenure, wrote on social media platform X that “Joe Biden can’t do it.” 

TRUMP CHALLENGES BIDEN TO SECOND PRESIDENTIAL DEBATE — BUT THERE’S A CATCH

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“As Senator, Vice President, President he served the United States of America with honor,” Renzi wrote. “He doesn’t deserve an inglorious ending, he doesn’t deserve one. Changing horses is a duty for everyone.” 

Biden looks off while with G7 leaders

From left: Giorgia Meloni, Prime Minister of Italy; Justin Trudeau, Prime Minister of Canada; Fumio Kishida, Prime Minister of Japan; Rishi Sunak, Prime Minister of Great Britain; EU Council President Charles Michel; German Chancellor Olaf Scholz (SPD); Emmanuel Macron, President of France; EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen and President Biden watch parachutists at the G-7 summit in Fasano, Italy, on June 13. (Michael Kappeler/picture alliance via Getty Images)

Polish Foreign Minister Radoslaw Sikorski struck a similar tone in a cryptic message on X that some have taken to be an unfavorable comparison between Biden and the great Roman emperor Marcus Aurelius.

“Marcus Aurelius was a great emperor, but he screwed up his succession by passing the baton to his feckless son Commodus (He, from the Gladiator) whose disastrous rule started Rome’s decline),” Sikorski wrote. “It’s important to manage one’s ride into the sunset.”

G7 summit

President Biden, Italy’s Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, French President Emmanuel Macron, Canada’s Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz, Britain’s Prime Minister Rishi Sunak and Japan’s Prime Minister Fumio Kishida attend a session on Africa, climate change and development on the first day of the G-7 summit in Savelletri, Italy, on June 13. (Reuters/Yara Nardi)

Marie-Agness Strack-Zimmermann, a German politician and current Chair of the Defense Committee of the Bundestag, told one outlet, “The fact that a man like Trump could become president again because the Democrats are unable to put up a strong candidate against him would be a historic tragedy that the whole world would feel,” The Guardian reported.  

WHITE HOUSE STAFF ‘MISERABLE’ AMID PRESSURE ON BIDEN: REPORT

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Other European officials have reportedly started to privately argue that Biden should step aside in favor of someone with a stronger chance of beating Trump, with Vice President Kamala Harris one of the leading candidates to assume the task.

Biden and Harris

President Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris appear on the Truman Balcony of the White House in Washington, D.C., on Thursday. (Tierney L. Cross/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

Bloomberg reported that sources familiar with high-level discussions between European officials worry about the U.S. election due to its potential impact on Ukraine and NATO at a time when Russia remains aggressive.

Biden will have a chance to reassure America’s allies during a NATO summit that he will host in the U.S. next week, with his every action under intense scrutiny. One official at the G-7 meeting in Italy last month told Bloomberg that an air of worry hung around the meetings due to Biden’s apparent cognitive issues. 

One person familiar with those conversations told The Washington Post that Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni had seen Biden as “mentally on top of his game” but physically weak — concerns that grew more pronounced following the debate.

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In Asia, Japan and South Korea, uneasiness has increased about a return to the strained relations of the Trump era, when his administration urged greater financial contributions for military assistance and tensions rose due to aggressive trade practices, Reuters reported.

Fox News Digital’s Paul Steinhauser and Remy Numa contributed to this report. 

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Slovakia's PM attends first public event since May 15 shooting

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Slovakia's PM attends first public event since May 15 shooting

A gunman shot the Slovakian prime minister five times as he greeted supporters in the town of Handlová in May.

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Slovakia’s Prime Minister Robert Fico has made his first public appearance since he was shot on May 15 in an apparent assassination attempt.

He spoke at an event at Devín Castle in the capital Bratislava to mark Saint Cyril and Methodius Day, a national holiday in Slovakia to commemorate the day the two Christian missionaries arrived in what was then Moravia.

He made only one reference to his shooting, referring to it only as an “unfortunate event”, and used his speech largely to talk about the need to build a barrier against progressivism which he said is spreading “like a cancer”.

“They are ideologies that are damaging this country. They are ideologies that were created perhaps only the day before yesterday. I do not want Slovakia to be one of the countries that make a caricature of Western civilisation. We are a proud nation,” he said. 

He also used his speech to caution against the war in Ukraine spiralling into a broader regional conflict.

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“If we do not do something in the coming days and months, the situation that is developing in Ukraine could get out of hand and we could see an uncontrolled war,” he warned.

Handlová shooting

The 59-year-old populist prime minister was shot in the abdomen at close range as he greeted supporters following a government meeting in Handlová on 15 May.

Videos showed him approach people gathered at barricades and reach out to shake hands as a man stepped forward, extended his arm and fired five rounds before being tackled and arrested.

Fico underwent a five-hour surgery to treat multiple wounds he suffered in the shooting, followed by another two-hour surgery two days later to remove dead tissue from his gunshot wounds.

In late May, he was airlifted from the hospital in Banská Bystrica to the capital, Bratislava, where he was nursed at home.

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Fico has since said he forgave his attacker and felt “no hatred towards the stranger who shot me”.

“I will not take any active legal action against him or seek damage compensation. I forgive him and let him sort out what he did and why he did it in his own head,” he said.

In early June, Slovakia’s Deputy Prime Minister Robert Kaliňák, who also serves as minister of defence in Fico’s government, said Fico’s condition was gradually improving but that he would likely have permanent health issues.

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