‘High costs (of housing, food and other necessities of life) and lagging wages in Ontario are taking toll.’
‘Many Ontarians remain stuck in high rent payments. Others are stuck in long commutes or housing that doesn’t fit their situation because their current place is rent control protected but a new place is not.’
News from Data Shows, a professional, non-partisan data gathering venue based in Ontario, Canada
Posted December 20th, 2024 on Niagara At Large

Inspite of all the perks and development charge breaks the Ford government and municipalities,, across Ontario , including in Niagara, are giving to developers, the province is lagging behind in housing building houses that many can afford with all of the other high costs they are facing.
Canadian housing starts were up 30 per cent between this November and November 2023 on big gains in BC, Alberta and Quebec, according to data released by CMHC this past December 16th.
But not Ontario, where November housing starts were lower than a year ago. At 5,506 unit starts, results were a tiny improvement over the terrible results of the previous three months.
With a population of 16 million, Ontario last month had fewer housing starts than Quebec, population nine million. Quebec workers started constructing 5,660 units last month.
BC and Alberta were close behind, at 4,048 and 4,983 starts respectively. BC has a population of 5.7 million; Alberta’s population is 5.0 million.
A monthly building effort the size of BC, Alberta or Quebec transposed onto Ontario would deliver more than 12,500 starts, a monthly target set by the PCs’ Housing Affordability Task Force report.
But the Ford PCs’ actual effort hit just 44 per cent of that target last month. They’ve failed to hit their target in 30 of the 30 months since their 2022 election pledge to hit them (see chart below).
Despite recent price drops, Ontario remains expensive.
In the four years from Doug Ford’s June 2018 election until the Ontario price peak, the average house price rose 72 per cent in Toronto and 94 per cent in Hamilton (see chart below).
The price crash since February 2022 has lowered house purchase prices by 19 and 23 per cent, respectively. But the damage has been deep. Many are left holding big mortgages about to renew at higher rates. And with mortgage rates well above pre-peak levels, the costs of ownership may only be cheaper for those coming with lots of cash.
And while apartment asking rents have also peaked, many Ontarians remain stuck in high rent payments. Others are stuck in long commutes or housing that doesn’t fit their situation because their current place is rent control protected but a new place is not.
High costs, lagging wages taking toll on economy
High costs, combined with Ontario’s lagging wages, leaves less income for other purchasing, and appears to be dragging down the province’s economy.
Most recent data shows Ontario retail sales are lower than February 2022] while the rest of Canada reached record highs. Consumer spending usually powers about two thirds of GDP.
Ontario’s jobless rate rose dramatically last month while falling in most other provinces. Toronto unemployment hit 8.1 per cent; in Windsor it’s 8.9 per cent. Bankruptcies are increasing faster in Ontario than in any other province.
Ontario’s housing experience shows the economic damage that comes with letting housing inflation run rampant, even long after the boom has turned to bust.
For more details, click on the CHMC housing report, click on – https://substack.com/redirect/604d381c-18a7-40ea-8100-6b8f50a4566e?j=eyJ1IjoiM3g4b3BsIn0.gTyF7RtVaWrg4_JLvD63hvYzJPuyQCsAk-UibLfp0Ec
About Data Shows – Some things actually matter. And when they do, effective people use data to guide their actions and evaluate their results. Ineffective people hide the data.
Data Shows brings reliable data and data analysis from quality sources like StatsCan, Bank of Canada, CMHC, CIHI, elections commissions and others.
Data Shows’ editor is Tom Parkin. Contact me with interesting data, data chart or a guest piece you’d like to submit to Data Shows: tparkin@impact-strategies.ca .
NIAGARA AT LARGE Encourages You To Join The Conversation By Sharing Your Views On This Post In The Space Following The Bernie Sanders Quote Below.
“A Politician Thinks Of The Next Election. A Leader Thinks Of The Next Generation.” – Bernie Sanders