Listen to you uneducated fuck, stop with your fucking BS assumptions. You blame the world for all of your problems and never look in the mirror, that's the problem with people like you. You have no work, let's blame the HST, blame everybody else. Typical and predictable. At least I have studied the theories as opposed to sprouting off the same bullshit your uneducated peers does day in and day out. And since you are so fucking stupid, here is an example of why construction costs have gone down:
Lets say, developer A get a service from contractor B for $100. This service is taxable for PST.
Under the old GST/PST system, developer A would pay $112 ($100 for the service, $5 in GST, and $7 in PST). Developer A can recover the GST but not the PST so the net cost of this transaction is $107.
Under the HST system, developer A would pay $112 ($100 for the service and $12 in HST). Developer A can recover all of the HST so the net cost of this transaction is $100.
Now, did construction cost go up or down?
You're the one with assumptions (most particularly that I don't work...and is that supposed to be an argument in your favor for HST, or against?...but nevermind).
You're a little misguided if you think that its that simple Wilde (I've already tried to communicate that to you, but it goes straight over your navel gazing head).
Developer A may have a contract with contractor A. And contractor B. And contractor C - and dozens/hundreds of contracts and PO's all the way to contractor YYYY.
These contractors will also have subcontracts with Subcontractor A - Z
And developer A may also have PO's and subcontracts with hundreds of material suppliers.
And these subcontractors and suppliers have product where they are purchasing supplies, and labour, and production facilities etc. A developer doesn't go to the hardware store and purchase all the screws from them directly, does he? No...all his subbies are purchasing all their own parts and supplies themselves.
How easy do you think it is for a developer to monitor these costs (for thousands upon thousands of different items/trades etc). If the developer was building the EXACT same product countless times over the course of a year then monitoring, comparing and controlling these costs would be simple, right? And when the developer realizes that the box of screws that cost his subtrade $5.99 including pst previously, when it is now still $5.99 net (with no value added tax) that he's going to be able to go back and push his subcontractor to push his subcontractor to push his supplier to give him that tax savings on the box of screws? Or the toilet gaskets? Or the electrical wiring caps?
Your example is a tad little simplistic. The provincial government estimates the elimination of the PST will reduce construction costs of building a home be a net total of 2%. Of course, if this is government propoganda we can assume that IF none of any of these component suppliers of materials, production and labour didn't raise their costs and pocket some of that difference that this is a best case scenario.
The reality is that contractors won't see any of that difference, and haven't. The overall change is hoped to have a net drop in overall cost of 2%, a partial offset of the 7% increase) assuming none of these suppliers grabs that margin. Good fucking luck.
But guys like you who read a lot of text books in simplistic terms like you've outlined can't (or don't want to) see the impracticality of these assumptions.
Needless to say, you conveniently focus on this one issue and ignore the other fact that the end purchaser can only claim 100% provincial portion of the HST to a cap of $20,000 on their purchase.
A $400,000 home costs $8,100 more
A $500,000 home costs $10,100 more
A $700,000 home costs $22,900 more
A $900,000 home costs $39,000 more
Wilde... it would be nice if things fell neatly into the economic theory you espouse, but the reality is that this just doesn't happen.