It cost more to the purchaser but not to the developer which you first sighted. And this increase to the purchaser is caused by the HST not increase in construction costs as you stated. So still apples and oranges.
Here is a reminder of what you said:
Your such a dipshit Wilde. If you want to argue semantics so that you can save face then go right ahead. However, not once did I ever site this specifically from a developer's perspective (because I don't work for a developer). As a matter of course...this is exactly what I said:
But you see, you're wrong when you make assumptions. The purchaser who buys a newly constructed home pays more.
That said - anything that costs the end purchaser more money affects the demand for the developer's product negatively. So what exactly are you trying to argue???
Any tax that a builder or developer has to pass along to an end purchaser is classified or referred to as a "construction cost" - at least in our industry. If you want to argue over terminology then have at it if that will entertain you.
But the affect of the HST on the construction industry is negative. The government tried to sell it on us by saying that "we've eliminated the ebedded pst", and the purchaser will get "HST rebates" to offset it, but its all smoke and mirrors to hide the reality of things...eliminating hidden taxes do not get passed on as savings to consumers like economic theory suggests, and the government lies to us about how much their offsets are. Its all bullshit.
Call it what it really is - its a fucking tax grab.
And there is no doubt in my mind that the government is trying to sell this crap in every industry. You can keep parroting what the government says because the book theory sounds good to you, but I'd suggest that if you want to see the real affect on how the hst has really affected us just open your eyes and observe.