This article appeared in the Toronto Sun. It should be a wake up call to all levels of government in this country.
Australia and Canada have much in common, perhaps more so than any other two industrialized countries. They share a common political and cultural heritage and similar institutions such as a federal system of government and bicameral parliament. They are similar in population, industry composition and their status as relatively open commodity-exporting countries.
But they part company on two key economic indicators—what economists call long-run "productivity performance" and growth in living standards. Productivity remains a critically important economic indicator, reflecting the ability of a jurisdiction's population to transform raw materials, work effort and ingenuity into useable goods and services. On both measures, Australia has enjoyed a long period of outperformance that raises questions about why Canada has not been able to achieve similar outcomes.
Based on internationally comparable data, Australia currently enjoys a four percentage-point advantage over Canada in both the level of productivity—that is, the level of goods and services produced (output produced per hour worked)—and average income, as measured by per-person gross domestic product (GDP). Put differently, when compared with the United States, Canada's average living standard (measured in per-person income after adjusting for inflation) is 78 per cent versus Australia's 82 per cent.
In fact, since 1990 Australia's per-person income growth has exceeded Canada's by half a percentage point (on average) while income growth has exceeded Canada's by 0.8 percentage points. These may seem like small differences but they add up to substantial differences over time. For example, average per-person income in Canada is now roughly US$51,000 versus US$54,000 in Australia.
Again, these differences in income growth are rooted in productivity growth. Between 1995 and 2019, Australia's average growth in labour productivity exceeded Canada's by 0.3 percentage points. Between 1996 and 1999, however, Australia experienced a labour productivity surge, averaging 3.6 per cent compared to Canada's 1.5 per cent, less than half Australia's rate.
What explains this long-term outperformance?
Australia benefited from extensive economic reforms beginning in the early 1980s and continuing through the 1990s that opened up the economy to foreign trade and investment, deregulated markets for goods and financial services, privatized state-owned businesses and introduced sweeping competition reforms.
Governments in Canada undertook similar reforms in the 1990s, but without the same impact on productivity growth. Some analysts attributed Canada's weak productivity growth (relative to the U.S.) to rising commodity prices and an appreciation in the Canadian dollar. However, Australia faced much the same shock to commodity prices and its exchange rate over the same period. Indeed, in 2011, Australia's exchange rate rose to its highest level since being floated in 1983.
Put simply, the Australian economy has outperformed Canada because of investment. At least until very recently, Australia has sustained a much higher level of investment as a share of its economy. Investment spending is key to new innovations and technologies that drive productivity growth. Consider that between 1995 and 2020, Australia's total investment represented 26 per cent as a share of the economy compared to just 22 per cent in Canada.
Clearly, the key role of investment spending in the outperformance of the Australian economy suggests that Canadian policymakers must pay more attention to policies that inhibit business investment.
https://www.fraserinstitute.org/article/heres-why-australians-make-more-money-than-canadians?fbclid=IwAR1aqc4O78Jc_P4JfxHCRwcOAze-Wd5MXmj2McIR_S9NsjqjxKNtUqGNJMw
I will bet the difference grew even faster after Justine replaced old Harper.
The new Liberal-NDP arrangement will reverse that.
:laugh:
Private investment is driving Australia's better eceonomic performance. Public spending is driving Canada's subpar performance.
Quote from: Fashionista post_id=444485 time=1648089722 user_id=3254
The new Liberal-NDP arrangement will reverse that.
:laugh:
Thanks. I can relax now
Quote from: Thiel post_id=444486 time=1648090242 user_id=1688
Private investment is driving Australia's better economic performance. Public spending is driving Canada's subpar performance.
Exactly. And Trudy want's to keep spending our money. Constantly increasing power is all he is about
Quote from: cc post_id=444491 time=1648091841 user_id=88
Quote from: Fashionista post_id=444485 time=1648089722 user_id=3254
The new Liberal-NDP arrangement will reverse that.
:laugh:
Thanks. I can relax now
I think we will all sleep a little easier knowing the NDP has convinced Trudeau to print money even faster than he already was.
Quote from: cc post_id=444493 time=1648092054 user_id=88
Quote from: Thiel post_id=444486 time=1648090242 user_id=1688
Private investment is driving Australia's better economic performance. Public spending is driving Canada's subpar performance.
Exactly. And Trudy want's to keep spending our money. Constantly increasing power is all he is about
He is looking for a legacy. Perhaps national pharmacare or dental. As it stands now all he has are the SNC-Lavalin, WE charity and Aga Khan scandals.
Quote from: Thiel post_id=444495 time=1648092215 user_id=1688
Quote from: cc post_id=444493 time=1648092054 user_id=88
Quote from: Thiel post_id=444486 time=1648090242 user_id=1688
Private investment is driving Australia's better economic performance. Public spending is driving Canada's subpar performance.
Exactly. And Trudy want's to keep spending our money. Constantly increasing power is all he is about
He is looking for a legacy. Perhaps national pharmacare or dental. As it stands now all he has are the SNC-Lavalin, WE charity and Aga Khan scandals.
Legalizing weed.
Quote from: Herman post_id=444496 time=1648093011 user_id=1689
Quote from: Thiel post_id=444495 time=1648092215 user_id=1688
Quote from: cc post_id=444493 time=1648092054 user_id=88
Quote from: Thiel post_id=444486 time=1648090242 user_id=1688
Private investment is driving Australia's better economic performance. Public spending is driving Canada's subpar performance.
Exactly. And Trudy want's to keep spending our money. Constantly increasing power is all he is about
He is looking for a legacy. Perhaps national pharmacare or dental. As it stands now all he has are the SNC-Lavalin, WE charity and Aga Khan scandals.
Legalizing weed.
That was a populist move that unseated Harper.
Quote
The new Liberal-NDP arrangement will reverse that.
:laugh:
Smartass. ac_toofunny
This was inevitable. Both Canada and Australia achieved high living standards exporting resources. Sometimes adding value to them when there is a market for it. Australia reduced red tape, streamlined the regualtory process, and reduced barriers to investing in resource exporting industries. Trudeau did the opposite. Australia chose prosperity for the people, Trudeau chose virtue signalling for his own ego.
Australia still gives a fuck about it's citizens. Canada was like that too when we arrived here in the 90's
I regret we didn't immigrate to Australia instead of Canada. No offense to Canadians.
Quote from: Gaon post_id=444600 time=1648174069 user_id=3170
I regret we didn't immigrate to Australia instead of Canada. No offense to Canadians.
Ah hell, I don't blame ya. And nobody here will be offended, I don't think. Australia is a better country than Canada thanks to Trudeau.
Quote from: Gaon post_id=444600 time=1648174069 user_id=3170
I regret we didn't immigrate to Australia instead of Canada. No offense to Canadians.
None taken. Immigrants sacrifice and maximize opportunities. Canada is offering less opportunities to get ahead. Who wants to sacrifice knowing their hard work will be in vain.
Despite the revenue geyser thanks to inflation, governments are hammering us with more taxes. Ottawa is moving ahead with its carbon tax increase of $10 on April 1st, which will further fan energy prices.
The new, ill-advised luxury tax on automobiles, private planes and yachts could well result in job losses as many taxpayers avoid the tax. Limitations on interest deductions under the corporate income tax will discourage investment, especially for resource and manufacturing firms with long-lived capital.
Raising taxes is the wrong course. If we want economic growth and sustainable budgets, governments should hold the line on spending and not increase taxes. With high commodity prices and strong nominal GDP growth, the federal government will be flush with cash. Not only could its final deficit fall by over half the predicted level this fiscal year, but it could balance its budget in two to three years without raising taxes. Of course, to do that it would have to stop spending like a mall shopper who has just won a five-minute shopping spree.
Taxes, regulations and a religious aversion to ressource development are the reason we have fallen behind Australia.
We might pay less on certain things, but we pay heaps on most things.
That's why our wages are jacked.
A medium fast food meal here costs 12-15 dollars. A pack of 30 cigarettes is 42-56 dollars. Every bottle of whiskey coming into this country attracts an approximate 25 dollar fee by our tax offices.... and that's just for standard dilutions like 37 to 42% percent.
We pay and pay and pay for anything of quantity or quality.
Quote from: "Dinky Dazza" post_id=444647 time=1648219909 user_id=1676
We might pay less on certain things, but we pay heaps on most things.
That's why our wages are jacked.
A medium fast food meal here costs 12-15 dollars. A pack of 30 cigarettes is 42-56 dollars. Every bottle of whiskey coming into this country attracts an approximate 25 dollar fee by our tax offices.... and that's just for standard dilutions like 37 to 42% percent.
We pay and pay and pay for anything of quantity or quality.
But, you attract investment and thanks to Trudeau, we scare it away.
Quote from: seoulbro post_id=444655 time=1648220614 user_id=114
Quote from: "Dinky Dazza" post_id=444647 time=1648219909 user_id=1676
We might pay less on certain things, but we pay heaps on most things.
That's why our wages are jacked.
A medium fast food meal here costs 12-15 dollars. A pack of 30 cigarettes is 42-56 dollars. Every bottle of whiskey coming into this country attracts an approximate 25 dollar fee by our tax offices.... and that's just for standard dilutions like 37 to 42% percent.
We pay and pay and pay for anything of quantity or quality.
But, you attract investment and thanks to Trudeau, we scare it away.
I don't believe we attract any meaningful investments.... aside from the real estate bubbles. We're far away, have no ability to meaningfully refine our oils, have no auto business since 2014-2015, have fuck all pharmaceutical manufacturing except what raw goods we get from Asia. In every key industry except mining and agriculture, we're off the board.
We're a lost continent these days.
Quote from: "Dinky Dazza" post_id=444659 time=1648221589 user_id=1676
Quote from: seoulbro post_id=444655 time=1648220614 user_id=114
Quote from: "Dinky Dazza" post_id=444647 time=1648219909 user_id=1676
We might pay less on certain things, but we pay heaps on most things.
That's why our wages are jacked.
A medium fast food meal here costs 12-15 dollars. A pack of 30 cigarettes is 42-56 dollars. Every bottle of whiskey coming into this country attracts an approximate 25 dollar fee by our tax offices.... and that's just for standard dilutions like 37 to 42% percent.
We pay and pay and pay for anything of quantity or quality.
But, you attract investment and thanks to Trudeau, we scare it away.
I don't believe we attract any meaningful investments.... aside from the real estate bubbles. We're far away, have no ability to meaningfully refine our oils, have no auto business since 2014-2015, have fuck all pharmaceutical manufacturing except what raw goods we get from Asia. In every key industry except mining and agriculture, we're off the board.
We're a lost continent these days.
I believe it was Seoul who posted a long time ago about foreign investment in Australia's resource industry..
We used to get that too before Justin Trudeau became prime minister.
Australia is going to make it''s own trains, trams, and ferries again.
AUSTRALIA TO MAKE OUR OWN TRAINS, TRAMS AND FERRIES AGAIN
https://www.advanceaustralia.org.au/australia_to_make_our_own_trains_trams_and_ferries_again?fbclid=IwAR1b4Ji-EJieIM-MKFHoITkb4fcB9yEtV0TZ-6loV6DjOKlKy9vo3gEWqLQ
Trudeau has primed the pump with a lot of taxpayer money even before the pandemic. It has been inflationary and of course doubled the federal debt. What it hasn't delivered are the good paying jobs we were assured it would before the 2015 election.