The Public Housing Dividend: Social and Economic Impacts of Public Housing in the GTHA

Public Housing in the GTHA: An Economic and Social Dividend

Investment in public housing provides substantial economic and social returns. Our analysis demonstrates that investing $36.4 billion to renew and expand public housing across the Greater Toronto and Hamilton Area generates approximately $102 billion in economic and social value between 2026 and 2050—a return of 2.8 times the original investment.

Key Outcomes

Outcome Area Key Result
Residents 52,230 years of homelessness avoided and housing for 85,948 additional residents by 2050
Health 524,133 fewer hospital days and 156,476 fewer emergency room visits
Economy Nearly $50 billion in cumulative GDP generated
Government $12.6 billion in government tax revenue
Overall Return $102 billion in economic impact and social value from a $36.4 billion investment

The Cost of Inaction

The analysis also highlights the consequences of underinvestment. Reducing public housing funding is estimated to result in 139 buildings being shuttered, the loss of 13,322 housing units, approximately 6,000 fewer people housed, and $8.8 billion in social value lost between 2026 and 2050.

Renewal and Expansion Must Work Together

The strongest outcomes are achieved when renewal and expansion occur simultaneously. Renewal-only strategies improve the quality and longevity of existing assets but do little to address growing housing demand. Expansion-only strategies increase supply but allow existing assets to deteriorate over time. A combined strategy delivers the greatest economic and social return.

The Human Dividend

Beyond the economic benefits, public housing generates significant improvements in quality of life and health outcomes. Compared with lower-investment scenarios, the combined investment strategy is associated with more than 524,000 hospital days avoided and 156,000 emergency room visits avoided over the study period. To put this in perspective, 524,000 hospital days is equivalent to more than three years of Toronto General Hospital operating at full inpatient capacity.

Conclusion

Public housing should not be viewed solely as a social expenditure. It is economic and social infrastructure that generates measurable returns for residents, governments, and the broader economy. The findings challenge the traditional view of public housing as a cost and instead position it as an investment that creates long-term value for society. The result is clear: public housing produces a dividend.

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