For much of the past century, the dream of owning a home has been a cornerstone of Canadian life — a promise of stability, security, and prosperity. But today, for many Canadians, that dream feels more out of reach than ever before. What happened? How did we go from a nation of builders and homeowners to a country where homes are increasingly treated not as places to live, but as financial assets?
To understand where we are, we must first understand where we’ve been.
The Early Days: Housing as a Private Matter
Building the Dream: Homeownership for the Many
The Retreat: Housing Left to the Market
Financialization: Turning Homes into Investments
Investors Rise: The Great Transformation
Fork in the Road: Housing as a Right or a Business?
The Future: Protecting Canada’s Housing Dream
The Early Days: Housing as a Private Matter
In the early 20th century, the Canadian government played virtually no role in housing. Shelter was considered a private concern — each family was left to fend for itself. As George Anderson, a former president of the Canadian Housing and Mortgage Corporation (CHMC), once noted, “Most of it was crummy, but because everyone was in the same boat, few thought they were disadvantaged.”
This laissez-faire attitude held until wartime realities forced the government’s hand. During World War I and the Great Depression, the federal government began making its first tentative interventions into housing, largely as temporary wartime measures or tools for economic stimulus — not as social rights.
The true turning point came in 1938 with the National Housing Act, which recognized that housing was, at last, a national issue. After World War II, Canada faced a severe housing shortage as more than a million returning soldiers and their families flooded into cities in need of homes. The federal government expanded its role, using housing both to address demand and to drive post-war economic recovery.
Building the Dream: Homeownership for the Many
The 1950s marked the beginning of Canada’s golden age of homeownership. In 1954, the government reduced the minimum down payment required for home purchases and allowed banks to lend directly to buyers. Suddenly, millions of Canadians could aspire to owning their own homes.
By the 1970s, the homeownership rate had surged from 40% to over 60%. Meanwhile, the government encouraged apartment construction and, for the first time, invested in social and subsidized housing. Canada was building — for renters, for buyers, for all.
But this era of broad-based housing expansion was fragile, built on political goodwill and a postwar consensus that began to unravel by the 1990s.
The Retreat: Housing Left to the Market
Facing a mounting debt crisis in the 1990s, successive governments under Brian Mulroney and Jean Chrétien withdrew federal support for affordable housing. Tax incentives for rental construction were eliminated, and investment in public housing plummeted.
In place of direct support, the government doubled down on promoting homeownership as a personal financial responsibility. The Home Buyers’ Plan, launched in 1992, allowed Canadians to withdraw from their RRSPs to buy homes — effectively privatizing retirement security through real estate investment.
This was the birth of what economists call asset-based welfare — encouraging Canadians to invest in homes as their main source of retirement savings, instead of relying on government pensions or income supports.
Financialization: Turning Homes into Investments
The 2000s saw the rise of another powerful force: financialization. Easy credit, low interest rates, and the invention of home equity lines of credit (HELOCs) allowed homeowners to treat their homes like ATMs — borrowing against rising values to renovate, invest, or buy additional properties.
Homes were no longer just for living in. They became vehicles for accumulating wealth.
Government policies amplified this trend. Mortgage securitization made it easier for banks to lend aggressively. Investors could now buy multiple properties with little risk, their mortgages ultimately backed by taxpayers through CMHC insurance programs.
Meanwhile, central banks — notably the Bank of Canada — slashed interest rates in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis and later during the COVID-19 pandemic, fueling a tidal wave of cheap credit into housing markets. Housing became a magnet not only for Canadian investors but also for global capital seeking a “safe” return.
Canadian Housing Timeline
1900: Canadian government played no role in housing
1938: National Housing Act for economic stimulus not social right
1947: Federal government expanded role to drive economic recovery
1954: Feds reduced minimum down payment requirements
1970: Homeownership surged to 60%
1990: Feds withdrawal support for affordable housing
1992: Home Buyers’ Plan creates asset-based welfare via RRSP withdrawals
2000: Massive real estate financialization (HELOCs, etc.) turn homes into ATMs
2008: Financial Crisis, Quantitative Easing, artificially low interest rates
2020: Covid-19, massive capital at low rates into housing as investors look for safe return
2025: Over 30% of Housing owned by corporate and individual investors

Investors Rise: The Great Transformation
In today’s Canada, a significant share of housing is owned by investors — from small-scale landlords to massive corporations. Statistics Canada estimates that investors own over 30% of homes in some provinces.
Initially, policymakers justified this shift by arguing that investors were providing rental supply. But in practice, many investors have merely repurposed homes built for families into rental commodities — reducing the supply available to first-time buyers and intensifying upward pressure on prices.
Technology has supercharged this trend. Algorithms now allow institutional investors to snap up homes the moment they hit the market, leaving young families scrambling to compete. Entire neighborhoods are being bought out, not by families, but by faceless corporate entities who never intend to live in them.
Consequences: A Broken System
Today, home prices have far outpaced incomes. Entire generations — millennials, Gen Z — are finding it impossible to save enough for a home, even while working full-time jobs. The old economic truths — that home prices track incomes, that more supply leads to affordability — no longer hold.
Instead, we live in a new paradigm:
Housing is no longer driven by need. It is driven by capital.
This transformation hasn’t just locked families out of ownership. It has diverted billions of dollars away from productive sectors like innovation and manufacturing into passive real estate speculation, eroding Canada’s global competitiveness.
A Fork in the Road: Housing as a Right or a Business?
We now face a stark choice:
- Continue down the path where homes are financial assets first, shelter second — a path that leads to deeper inequality and permanent rental tenancy for most Canadians.
- Or change course, and rebuild a housing system that treats homes as foundations for families, not profit engines for investors.
Experts propose tangible solutions:
- Increasing down payment requirements for investors
- Taxing capital gains on investment properties at the same rate as income
- Removing GST on newly built homes for first-time buyers
- Ending mortgage interest deductions for rental investors
- Enforce and support ‘Work-from-Home’ policies that enable Canadians to work far away from dense population centres and access cheap land
These measures are not about punishing success. They are about rebalancing a system that has gone wildly off course.
The Future: Protecting Canada’s Housing Dream
Canada has a proud history of making bold policy choices when times demanded it. After World War II, we built millions of homes for returning soldiers and working families. Today’s housing crisis demands a response of equal ambition.
If we want future generations to be able to afford homes — if we want a vibrant, productive economy where innovation and entrepreneurship thrive — we must act now.
We must choose to jealously protect Canada’s homes for Canadian families, not global capital.
Because if we don’t fight for it now, we may never get another chance.

