Toronto Is The Fastest-Growing City In U.S. And Canada, And That’s Not Good


Saturday, June 1st, 2019

The city’s “stunning” growth has a downside

Daniel Tencer
other

Torontonians could find themselves “doubling up” on housing with friends or relatives in the coming years as the city’s breakneck population growth outstrips the supply of new housing, an urban planning expert is warning.

In an analysis published online this week, researchers Frank Clayton and Eva Shi of Ryerson University’s Centre for Urban Research and Land Development found that Toronto is the fastest-growing city in the U.S. or Canada, and by a long shot. The city added more than 77,000 net new residents in the year ending in July, 2018, more than three times as many people as the next municipality, Phoenix, Ariz.

The researchers describe this rate of growth as “stunning.”

Looking at metro areas, Greater Toronto had the second-fastest population growth, behind only Dallas-Fort Worth. Greater Montreal was the sixth-fastest growing metro.

But while that may look like success from some perspectives, it means the city is risking a serious housing crisis, study co-author Frank Clayton said.

The region may see a repeat of the situation from the early 1990s, when developers pulled back on home construction amid falling house prices, but the population kept growing.

People found themselves “doubling up” or “tripling up” on housing, often with more than one generation of family living in a single home, Clayton said.

That effect could be particularly strong today, given that younger Canadians are already increasingly living with their parents. 

“In the ’90s, immigration was very strong but it wasn’t showing up in the housing demand numbers,” Clayton, a real estate and urban economist, told HuffPost Canada by phone.

As is the case now, affordability was at multi-year lows. But unlike today, the economy was shrinking in the early 1990s, with the region losing some 200,000 jobs amidst a North American recession. Interest rates were high, making mortgages prohibitively expensive. The result was that developers couldn’t unload empty condos even as residents were forced into shared housing.

Today’s home sales slowdown could result in something similar. Data from Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. shows developers are reacting to the slowdown by cutting back on new construction.

© Huffpost



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