Timlin Lecture in Economics
Speaker
Dr. Nathaniel Baum-Snow
University of Toronto
Title
Housing Supply and Affordability in Canada
Abstract
Since 2000, housing markets across Canada have experienced growth rates in prices that far exceed corresponding rates of household income growth. However, rents have grown at similar rates to household incomes. In the 2015-2024 period, immigration has been a central booster of housing demand and population growth, compensating for declining birth rates. Annual per-capita housing unit new construction rates have grown slightly to about 0.0075 across all types of markets for 1991-2024, even as Canada’s population boomed in 2023-2024, with the composition shifting markedly from single-family homes to multi-family structures. Purpose-built rental construction has recently risen from very low levels. To understand these patterns, we consider local regulatory environments and infrastructure provision, rental housing supports, sources of housing demand growth, and Canada’s macroprudential regulatory institutions and environment.
Date
Thursday, March 26, 2026
Time
3:30 p.m.
Location
HLTH 1130