WhatFinger

New Frontier study looks at lack of enforceable property rights across Canada

50% of Canadians wealth not protected from expropriation



WINNIPEG, MB - In a review of the wealth and property in Canada, a new report from the Frontier Centre for Public Policy notes that over 50% of the personal wealth held by Canadians is held in real estate. The report, authored by Ottawa-based consultant Stephanie Farrington, notes that much of that personal property wealth is based primarily, but not exclusively, in home ownership.

Critically however, the report, Subject to Approval: Real Property Rights in Canada, notes that while Canada followed in the British tradition of respecting private property, Canadians actually possess few enforceable rights to private property. “In Canada, real property ownership resembles real property ownership in the United Kingdom more closely than it resembles real property ownership in the United States,” notes Farrington. “It is important to use the term ‘real property ownership’ to remind ourselves of our limited rights to the property we think of as our own. When a person buys and sells real property under current Canadian law, that person has more rights to the buildings and attachments than to the land itself.” The 14-page report notes that the lack of actual property rights is especially noticeable in rural Canada. For rural land owners, the emphasis on Canada’s growing resource economy and a heightened sensitivity to the environmental features of the land mean property rights in rural areas are continuing to erode. If Canadians are to have functional property rights, Farrington writes thatlaws must be changed to guarantee of fair compensation for expropriated lands. Specifically, Farrington recommends the following changes: Compensation should be calculated based upon the value of the property to the expropriating authority, the tenure of the property owners, and the impact on their income and not the value of the property if it were empty or as it was when the owner purchased it; Fair and consistent laws regarding compensation at the municipal, provincial and federal level for expropriations. Farrington further writes that the latter - consistent laws - are critically needed in order to protect the investment, security and income of Canadian families in all regions of the country. To download a copy of Subject to Approval: Real Property Rights in Canada, click here For more information or to arrange an interview, contact the author: Stephanie Farrington 613-304-7185 stephanie.farrington@gmail.com or Gary Slywchuk Troy Media Corporation 403-835-8192 gary.slywchuk@troymedia.com

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