What I've come to realize is that prices are directly tied to desire to live in an area/country.
Vancouver is the "best" place to live if you've got money (or want to pretend you have money) as the lifestyle is second to none. You have the ocean.. recreation.. mountains.. best climate in Canada... flowers everywhere... relaxed/healthy lifestyle etc. so it will always remain the most expensive place to live in Canada. If all real estate drops, Vancouver will still be the most expensive.
Toronto is the "next best" place to live because you are in the heart of the Canadian economy. That's where the jobs are. That's where the big salaries are. That's where the specialty infrastructure is (top hospitals, universities, museums, art, entertainment, etc). Toronto will always be the second most expensive.
The subburb areas (within 100km commute) will always be the next in demand due to their proximity to the big centers. I think it's impossible to look at housing as a whole (entire country) and relate it to these two regions. GTA and GVA. The laws of affordability, ratios, etc. don't jive in these areas the same way they would in the rest of the country. People truly give up luxuries and extra income to live in these areas. The alternative is finding a job at half the rate up in Sudbury or out in St. Johns -- where you could easily afford your house.
Nobody is mentioning what the average prices are like in other countries major cities (or average price vs. average income).
What is the average price in Manhattan? (Our downtown Toronto)
What is the average price in Los Angeles? (Our downtown Vancouver)
What about London UK?
What about Madrid Spain?
What about Frankfurt Germany?
Yes, the US housing crisis really killed their market, but I believe the main cities did not get affected the same way as say Arizona or places in Ohio, Detroit, Louisiana, and other places plagued by lack of jobs and low incomes. People in Manhattan did not lose their shirts -- because even if prices drop, they are bound to shoot up quickly -- it's the TOP place to live in the country. Just like Toronto & Vancouver are to Canada.
http://therealdeal.com/newyork/articles ... dated-data
Quote:
Sales prices for Manhattan development sites rebounded in 2010 to their levels from the height of the real estate boom, according to a new report from Eastern Consolidated (see the full report below). Transaction volume was up modestly over the course of the year, but the average price per buildable square foot, and the average transaction size, soared to unexpected highs, the brokerage said. Land sale prices, which had plummeted to below $200 per square foot at the end of 2009, rose sharply during 2010 to an average of $330 per square foot. The previous high was seen during the first quarter of 2008, when prices were at $321 per buildable square foot. One caveat: a large portion of 2009 transactions took place in Upper Manhattan, while 2010 saw a concentration of large transactions in the Plaza District. Nonetheless, Peter Hauspurg, CEO of Eastern Consolidated, said "none of us here would have ever predicted in the dark days of 2009 that we would sell as many development sites in 2010 as we did and at prices seen as recently as 2008." TRD