Scheer pledges to allow longer mortgages, remove ‘stress test’ for renewals
VAUGHAN, Ont. — Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer laid out a plan this morning he says would make it cheaper for Canadians to buy homes, loosening rules put in place by the former Conservative government during the global financial crisis.
Scheer pledged he’d return to allowing first-time homebuyers to take out 30-year mortgages to help lower monthly payments.
“For millions of Canadians their home is the largest investment they will ever make,” Scheer said.
Beginning in 2008, the Harper Conservatives began reducing the maximum mortgage amortization rate for insured mortgages. They started by knocking it down from 40 to 35 years, and in 2011 reduced it to 30 years.