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The verdict is in: the B.C. foreign buyers tax really did pull down Vancouver’s home prices.

That’s if you ask BMO economist Douglas Porter, who issued the following chart on Tuesday.

This chart shows that Vancouver home prices started dropping pretty clearly after July 2016, the last month before B.C. instituted a property transfer tax on foreign buyers. BMO

The chart takes its info from the MLS Home Price Index (HPI), a tool that the Canadian Real Estate Association (CREA) uses to monitor price fluctuations in the housing market.

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It shows prices clearly trending downward after July 2016, which was one month before the B.C. government implemented a 15 per cent property transfer tax on foreign buyers in response to rapidly-increasing home prices.

By contrast, the index showed home prices in Toronto and Victoria (which was not subject to the B.C. tax) continuing their upward climb.

“We have enough history now to distinguish the clear divergence between Vancouver (down) and Toronto (still straight up),” Porter wrote.

READ MORE: Is B.C.’s foreign buyers tax cooling Vancouver’s housing market? Too early to tell, say experts

Porter offered up the chart in an effort to leave no doubt as to why home prices fell: the foreign buyers tax, and not mortgage rules implemented by the federal Liberals last October.

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The rules required that buyers not only qualify for mortgages at their lender’s negotiated rate, but at the Bank of Canada’s posted rate.

There were concerns that the new mortgage rules would make housing even less affordable (they limit how much money buyers can borrow). They certainly don’t appear to have pulled home prices down in at least two major cities.

A real estate sold sign is shown outside a house in Vancouver on Tuesday, Jan.3, 2017. The Canadian Press/Jonathan Hayward

This isn’t the only data suggesting that Vancouver home prices have fallen since July 2016.

Data from the Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver (REBGV), which is not seasonally adjusted, shows the benchmark price of a Greater Vancouver home peaking in August and then steadily falling in subsequent months.

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The news comes after Demographia ranked Vancouver as the world’s third most unaffordable housing market for last year, having grown by 11.8 per cent annually.

Toronto, however, had the second-fastest growing unaffordability rate, at 7.7 per cent in 2016.