The situation is indeed similar, but in more than the superficial cause of concern; its also in the made-up reason of zoning, which is almost certainly much less restrictive than it was 20 or 30 years ago, when housing was much more affordable.
(that's not an argument against zoning reform, just against blaming housing prices on zoning which is nonsense)
There really is no secret, in Australia, the U.S., Canada or elsewhere.
Ban anyone from owning more than 2 residences at all, ever. (waivers for estates for the recently deceased).
Don't tax foreign ownership of residential, outlaw it.
Don't insure mortgages with under 'x' % equity; ban anyone from buying a home without paying 25% down.
Cap foreign under graduate students to 10% of enrollment; and require the University or College accepting them to provide on-campus housing for 100% of international students.
Cap foreign graduate students (Masters degree/PhD/Professions) at 25% of enrollment and require provision of on campus housing for all students.
Eliminate capital gains exemptions on primary residences.
Treat capital gains on residential real estate as 'normal income' for the purposes of taxation.
Outlaw entirely shorr-term rentals, in purpose-built housing (non-hotel).
Do that and re-set the minimum wage to what it would be if growth in productivity over the last 5 decades has been shared with workers proportionately.
(I haven't seen the number for Canada for the above, but for the U.S. its $21.50 USD per hour) ; a straight exchange rate adjustment would put the minimum wage here at $29 per hour.
There ya go, now housing's affordable again.
As noted, I feel that based on real world experience in other jurisdictions, these particular sets of medications/devices should cost next to nothing to deliver on a net basis to government. Birth Control for 2 years is roughly the same cost as one abortion; its also a lot cheaper than the costs associated w/unwanted children, especially in low-income scenarios.
Likewise, treating those suffering from un-treated diabetes and/or insulin shock is a significant, avoidable cost.
Certainly, there are other aspects of full, comprehensive, pharmacare, but they're not as bad as most would think.
Consider that gov't pays for drug benefits for civil servants, police, ems, teachers, professors, most municipal employees etc. That's a lateral cost move from a corporate drug plan to a state one.
At the high end, in net cost, You're looking at 0.3% of federal spending.
And that can be mitigated with low co-pays, if desired.
Again, I have no issues with this and would support much of the population having the option to opt into a program that would support them in the fashion that the ever expanding civil servant class enjoys (and I partially benefit from this largesse as well to be upfront) Fair is fair and to those actually producing wealth through toil, they should be fully able to enjoy these same benefits.
My concerns again run to how do we pay for this in the longer term. Our debt to GDP ratio is somewhere above 106%, amongst the top ten nations (with 'advanced' economies) on earth. People will argue "nuts to that" as Japan is 255% of GDP, Greece & Singapore 168%, Italy 144%, USA 123%, France 110%, Portugal 108%, Spain 107% and then us, closely followed by Belgium and the UK. The G7 average is 128%
Somehow we have to service this debt, and in Q3 of 2023 this totalled CDN$10.1 cents for every dollar of revenue for the feds.
And then we have the productivity problem, an ongoing issue that puts us at a disadvantage constantly. Compared to our neighbours to the south, we are roughly 72% as productive, a number that has consistently slipped for the past 20 years. Internationally, Canada is barely in the top 20 industrialized nations, and we are less than 1/2 as productive as the land that Guinness built. GDP per capita and GDP per hour worked are fundamental building blocks of our living standards. And we are coming up short.
These are all fundamental challenges - delivering the programs that people (and the country) need, paying people (and certain segments of the employed) ever increasing wages and benefits, paying for the programs that these same people need. How we are going to grow our economy and our productivity at a rate to support those programs and to support the rate of spending by government and government institutions? This is a conundrum that politicians of all stripes seem all to readily able to ignore as long as the public is not really interested either - just keep bringing us the goodies.
I was going to go off and talk about how hard sometimes it was to keep jobs in Canada when our USA management decided almost everything made more sense to produce in the Carolinas, but we willingly export, and have exported so much technology and those jobs to other places, and we just seem to be content to do so. Why fight it? The history of Canada exporting technology and jobs is long and illustrious - Massey Ferguson, Champion to name a couple of local examples. Dead in Canada and alive and thriving elsewhere. As long as we have Costco and Walmart, all seems to be ok. We really are a country of "hewers of wood and drawers of water" and even those jobs the Chinese contend can be done cheaper in China, just ship us the goods. We already do so with logs, logs then made into plywood and veneers, and shipped back to Canada at rates undercutting Canadian mills, putting Canadian workers out of skilled paying jobs. The USA also exports logs to China as well, a thriving business, but imposes stiff duties on incoming plywood products to protect USA skilled trades. Canada is not interested in skilled jobs and has refused to even talk about protecting Canadian workers (But we'll fight to the death with the USA over softwood lumber duties). Perhaps the plywood is sold through Costco or Walmart.
Anyways, enough of that, let's see where the Liberals and the NDP take this initiative and the implementation of the programs so recently announced.
cy