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Toronto’s land transfer tax revenue is booming, but the cupboard’s still bare

Toronto’s land transfer tax revenue is booming, but the cupboard’s still bare

‘The message to Toronto is, ‘Don’t spend it all,’ economist says

Toronto's red-hot real estate market has sent municipal land transfer tax revenues soaring. But the city's spending all that money, not saving it.

Toronto’s red-hot real estate market has sent municipal land transfer tax revenues soaring. But the city’s spending all that money, not saving it. (Sean Kilpatrick/Canadian Press)

In times of plenty, it can be easy to forget there may be leaner years ahead.

But Toronto city council and its city managers need only look westward for a cautionary tale about relying on a volatile source of revenue; here, it’s the municipal land transfer tax — but in Alberta it was oil.

Plunging oil prices have taken their toll on provincial revenues — down to $1.4 billion this year, from a high of more than $10 billion. That’s a glimpse of what could happen in Toronto when the housing bubble eventually bursts, real estate economist Frank Clayton says.

Unless, however, we choose to follow Norway’s example.

City Manager Peter Wallace

City Manager Peter Wallace says that the municipal land transfer tax is a volatile source of revenue – and the city shouldn’t count on it indefinitely. (CBC)

The Norwegian path

The oil-rich Scandinavian country has invested its energy revenues in a sovereign wealth fund since 1996, which now tops more than $1.158 trillion. Typically, the government can draw up to four per cent from that fund each year, slightly more than its annual 3.7 per cent rate of return, according to Norges Bank Investment Management.

And when the economy dipped last year, the country weathered it easily, taking its first-ever capital transfer from what Clayton dubbed its “rainy day fund”.

“So now that oil prices have gone down, Norway’s got assets and it’s producing income,” the Ryerson University professor said. “So the message to Toronto is, ‘Don’t spend it all.'”

…click on the above link to read the rest of the article…

 

Connected devices quietly mine our data, privacy experts say

Connected devices quietly mine our data, privacy experts say

Hackers could use them as stepping stone to another part of your network

The Internet of Things - gadgets we wear and install that are connected to a network - quietly mines information about us and can leave consumers vulnerable to a hacker, cybersecurity experts say.

The Internet of Things – gadgets we wear and install that are connected to a network – quietly mines information about us and can leave consumers vulnerable to a hacker, cybersecurity experts say. (iStock)

If you control your garage door, your heating and your fridge from your smartphone, expect that someone else could get control of them, too, cybersecurity expert Scott Wright says.

The explosion of the so-called Internet of Things — the gadgets we strap to ourselves or install in our homes, offices and cars that are connected and controlled by a network — leaves a data trail for hackers. It can tell them when we’re home, what we’re saying, and about our health.

And attacks on machines, like the Jeep Cherokee that had its brakes and other controls remotely disabled last summer, also shows that these connected devices can be a back door for hackers.

It’s largely happening because manufacturers push technology to what it’s capable of, says Wright, president of Security Perspectives Inc., says. But they aren’t designing with security in mind, he said.

And most of us aren’t buying things with that in mind either.

Voice-activated TVs

It may come as a surprise, then, that if you’re watching TV, it could be listening to you.

“Smart TVs and appliances are sort of communicating either with each other, just monitoring your activity and deciding what you might want to do next,” Wright says. “You can give them commands like the way you do to Siri, but the TV manufacturers haven’t really had a lot to think about in terms of security like Apple.”

…click on the above link to read the rest of the article…

 

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