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Seriously?!?!
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Last post: May 13, 2024, 10:23:35 PM
Re: Seriously?!?! by Lokmar

avatar_Herman

TD Bank Predicts Canada Will Enter Into a Recession This Year

Started by Herman, May 21, 2025, 08:01:40 PM

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Thiel

gay, conservative and proud

knows things


DKG

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James Bond


Herman

Youth unemployment (ages 15-24) is at a record of 14%. TD thinks Canada is entering a recession with another 100,000 jobs to be lost.
Wouldn't it be nice to have a responsible budget? Maybe announce an intention to build a pipeline? Mark Carney is already failing Canadians.

Herman

The Hudson's Bay Company says that 8300 employees will be laid off, and all stores will be shuttered for good by June 1. The remaining one thousand employees will be laid off in the weeks to come.

.

Quote from: Herman on May 29, 2025, 03:31:26 PMThe Hudson's Bay Company says that 8300 employees will be laid off, and all stores will be shuttered for good by June 1. The remaining one thousand employees will be laid off in the weeks to come.
R.I.P Zellers. Again.

DKG


.

Quote from: DKG on June 01, 2025, 09:51:40 AMThe difference is that shoppers miss Zellers. I don't think they will miss HB.
I never set foot inside one; I don't remember even seeing one. But from what I understand they had brought Zellers back as a "store within a store" type of arrangement.

There were two Zellers as far as I knew in Ottawa. Then they turned into Targets. Which folded within about six months. Dunno what technique HBC marketing managers were employing in their offices, but I hope they packed enough lube for it.

DKG

Quote from: . on June 01, 2025, 02:13:19 PMI never set foot inside one; I don't remember even seeing one. But from what I understand they had brought Zellers back as a "store within a store" type of arrangement.

There were two Zellers as far as I knew in Ottawa. Then they turned into Targets. Which folded within about six months. Dunno what technique HBC marketing managers were employing in their offices, but I hope they packed enough lube for it.
Walmart Canada made sure Target's billion dollar venture here became a boondoggle.

Herman


DKG

In the end, nothing will get done. Big interprovincial infrastructure projects will not get built. Pet barriers between provinces will remain, foreign investment will continue to avoid Canada, productivity will continue to be the G20 laggard and our taxes will remain uncompetitive.

Carney can't fix Canada's underperforming economy on his own

Prime Minister Mark Carney's pledge to make the Canadian economy the strongest in the G7 is the equivalent of attempting to turn around the Titanic before it hits the iceberg.

An indication of the enormity of this task is to look at the performance of the G7 countries in real Gross Domestic Product (GDP) per capita, which measures economic output per person, adjusted for inflation, and is a widely accepted metric of a nation's prosperity and standard of living.

Low economic growth as measured by real GDP per capita has been a longstanding problem in Canada.

Under Carney's predecessor, Justin Trudeau (who appointed Carney to chair his economic growth task force in September 2024), Canada recorded the worst record of economic growth since the government of R.B. Bennett in the depths of the Great Depression.

According to Jake Fuss, director of fiscal studies for the Fraser Institute writing in The Hub last year, Canada's real GDP per capita grew by 1.9% in the Trudeau years.

That was lowest in the G7, which includes the U.K., Germany, France, Italy, Japan and, most alarmingly, the U.S., our largest trading partner, where real GDP per capita grew by 14.7% during the same period.

University of Calgary economist Trevor Tombe, also writing in The Hub last year, noted real GDP per capita in the U.S. is now almost 50% higher than in Canada – unprecedented in modern history.

In the Liberals' 2022 budget, then-finance minister Chrystia Freeland warned that unless this trend is reversed, "the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development projects that Canada will have the lowest per-capita GDP growth rate among its (38) member countries" from 2020 to 2060.

Carney's announcement of proposed legislation on Friday – which he wants passed before Parliament adjourns from the summer – to reduce federal barriers to interprovincial trade, increase labour mobility and streamline government approvals for nation building infrastructure projects, are all aimed at increasing economic growth.

But they all depend on co-operation by and among the provinces. And the reality is that decades of inaction on these issues has cost the Canadian economy an estimated $200 billion annually, increased the cost of goods and services to Canadians by up to 14.5% and reduced GDP growth by up to 8% annually.

At the meeting between Carney and Canada's premiers and territorial leaders last week in Saskatoon to address these issues in the face of the threat posed to the Canadian economy by U.S. President Donald Trump's tariffs, all the participants paid lip service to working together on these issues.

But the one premier not present – B.C.'s David Eby, who was on a trade mission to Asia – promptly rejected any new pipeline crossing his province's territory, as did many Quebec politicians when it comes to their province.

Alberta Premier Danielle Smith has cited the enormous economic damage caused by Canada's failure to build pipelines.

Had the Northern Gateway, Energy East and Keystone pipelines been built (Keystone was killed by then-U.S. president Barack Obama), she said, Canada would be producing 2.5 million more barrels of oil per day.

"That's $55 billion a year worth of GDP value, which is worth $17 billion to my government alone and about an equal amount to the federal government."

The Carney government does have more direct control of some issues it can move on to boost Canada's economic growth.

For example, it can introduce taxation policies that encourage businesses to invest in new technologies that boost productivity, as well as increase competition.

It can lower Canada's immigration levels so that increases in population do not exceed the rate of economic growth, which reduces GDP per capita.

It can reduce government spending.

But Carney's election campaign platform also outlined $130 billion in new spending over four years with total deficits of $224.8 billion.

While Carney says most of that will be spent on infrastructure, it's 71% higher than the $131.4 billion in deficit spending the Trudeau government predicted during the same period in its fall economic statement in December 2024.

Finally, of course, Carney needs to negotiate a deal on tariffs with Trump.
https://torontosun.com/opinion/columnists/goldstein-carney-cant-fix-canadas-underperforming-economy-on-his-own

Mark Carney

I never intended to fix Canada's broken economy. But, now the premiers will get blamed instead of me.

Canadians are so gullible. :crampe:


Shen Li

Quote from: Herman on June 09, 2025, 06:44:47 PM

QuoteAccording to Jake Fuss, director of fiscal studies for the Fraser Institute writing in The Hub last year, Canada's real GDP per capita grew by 1.9% in the Trudeau years.

That was lowest in the G7
The Canada we immigrated to in the 90's is night and day difference from the one I emigrated from. And when I say night and day, I mean heaven and hell.

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