Canada's standard of living slips

alienofwar

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Mar 2, 2005
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---Canada's standard of living slips - Falling even further behind the U.S.

By SIMON TUCK

Thursday, March 3, 2005 Updated at 6:39 AM EST

From Thursday's Globe and Mail

Ottawa — Canada's standard of living fell further behind the United States during the past two years and the gap is expected to grow over the next two, partly because Ottawa did not do enough in its recent budget to boost the economy, according to a leading economic forecaster.
In the first comprehensive economic forecast since last week's federal budget, Global Insight (Canada) Ltd. says Canada's standard of living had slipped to 84 per cent of that in the U.S. by the end of 2004 from 87 per cent two years earlier. That three-percentage-point increase in the gap reversed a 1999-2002 trend, when it narrowed to 13 percentage points from 17.

Dale Orr, chief economist with Global Insight (Canada), said he largely attributes the recent widening of the gap to the appreciation of the Canadian dollar, which has made Canadian exports about 30 per cent more expensive in the critical U.S. market.

The first year of the four-year period also saw the Canadian economy battered by one-time events such as the SARS outbreak, the discovery of a case of bovine spongiform encephalopathy in Alberta and the power blackout in Ontario, he added. "We have the potential to do a lot better."

But Mr. Orr and other economists don't expect that to happen, at least in relation to the U.S. standard of living, over the next couple of years. The U.S. economy is expected to outpace its Canadian counterpart this year and next, which Mr. Orr forecasts will expand the standard-of-living gap by another 1.6 percentage points.


That means the gap will have widened by 4.6 percentage points over the four-year period, or 35.4 per cent of the initial 2002 gap of 13 percentage points.

Economists say Canada can improve its economic growth and standard of living by boosting economic productivity through measures such as corporate and personal income tax cuts, more aggressive writeoff schedules for capital investments and smart investments in such areas as transportation and education.

Critics say last week's federal budget was short on measures to boost Canada's productivity and therefore its standard of living. They cited the document's tepid tax cuts, some of which don't kick in for three years, and big increases to social spending.

"We should be paying much more attention to economic growth," Mr. Orr said in an interview.

Canada had narrowed the standard-of-living gap, as measured by gross domestic product per capita, with the United States to about 13 percentage points about three years ago, after falling to as much as 18 percentage points in 1993.

An expected slump in Canadian economic growth is expected to raise another hurdle, at least in the short term. Global Insight's update forecasts growth for 2005 of 2.6 per cent, compared with the 2.9 per cent forecast in Finance Minister Ralph Goodale's budget.

Jack Mintz, president of the C.D. Howe Institute, an economic think tank, said the U.S. standard of living has also been improving strongly in recent years because the corporate sector made massive investments in new machinery in the late-1990s

Those investments have since led to improved productivity, and therefore a higher standard of living, Mr. Mintz said.

He said the federal budget, which featured dramatic spending increases and minimal tax cuts, was a step in the wrong direction because there were few measures to boost the economy. "I think our productivity has always been a problem."---



Its not suprise when more than half of Canada leans too far to the left and are more concerned with their failing healthcare system and social programs. When will Canadians learn that its all about the economy!? Also wanting to distance yourself from the biggest trading partner is not going to help either (hint to the far left idealists). It all started with Trudeau too. When my dad was young, he told me that the Canadian dollar was at the same level and sometimes higher than the U.S dollar...then the socialist leaning Trudeau came into power, borrowed too much money, put us into incredible debt with his mentally deficient tax increases and the economy just slumped after that...and thats when our standard of living fell.

Of course, down south here were not too happy about Bush's spending as well. But at least some of it went to tax cuts that helped prevent the economy from falling further into recession and at least hes making a effort to decrease the deficit by half.

Also on another note...Germany's unemployment rate increased to almost 13 percent. All the more proof why socialists should not be elected to power.

Jeremy
 

Andem

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Mar 24, 2002
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The whole article looks like speculation. I find anything mentioned in there hard to believe simply because the sources seem shady. How about looking at real sources which take in facts? Canada moves up to #4: United Nations -- The information used to write that article was compiled directly from the United Nations and their annual study on standard of living.
 

Andem

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By the way, alienofwar, what is your reason for posting this? Is it to justify something? ;) Even if Canada's standard of living was dropping, it would still be higher than the United States. We'll just see about it all with the UN's next study.
 

alienofwar

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Mar 2, 2005
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Shady??? What do you mean by shady? You guys trust the U.N 100% with everything they say, considering its a international body...but a domestic economic analyst has no merit by your standards? Thats not right.

Anyways, that study by the U.N is actually a quality of life indicator and takes everything into account concerning a country excluding the measurment of income. The study in the article I posted is a measurement of the standard of living...meaning the level of material comfort that is available to the individual. The U.S definitely outranks Canada on that. And any hard working person would appreciate that when it comes to the bottom line of their check books.

Now from a personal perspective, being someone who has lived in Canada and who is now living in the U.S, I can definitely tell you the quality of life down here is much better in terms of what I can buy with each dollar I make, meaning I have more buying power than I did in Canada. If you make minimum wage down here and depending on where you live in terms of housing costs...you can live alot better down here than you can in Canada. Anyways, thats from my own experiences, I can't speak for everyone.

Anyways, my point by posting that article was that social spending and the resistance to lower taxes in Canada is definitely hurting the average Canadians standard of living...and if your working at minimum wage, that can really dig a hole in your pocket.

Jeremy
 

EagleSmack

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Feb 16, 2005
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Well. Well, Well

It looks like everything isn't as rosy as the good Reverend and his flock try to make it appear to be. Here we have an article and a person speaking from experience and all the Rev can do is insult him as he typically does when he is losing an argument.

Yes Jeremy... these folks worship at the feet of the UN. They prostrate themselves before Koffi and his corrupt crew.
 

Reverend Blair

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Apr 3, 2004
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RE: Canada's standard of

Odd, you seem to be blaming all the world's problems on us. Why is that? Why are you afraid to take responsibility for the people that have died because of policies that you support? Why are you afraid to take responsibility for environmental disasters caused by your short-sighted greed?
 

fubbleskag

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www.speedofwood.com
 

EagleSmack

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Where did I blame Canada for anything?

I just like throwing your gibberish back in your face because you blame the US for everything!

You are a quintisential victim. Blame the US and Bush for everything. Ignore all of the positive and hype the negative. You praise some of the biggest environmental violators and crooks like China and Japan.

However it is not fun to blame them as they will just smile and nod and laugh at the weakness of your country.
 

Rick van Opbergen

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Considering the article is true, and the purchasing power of Canada is lower than the US, I have to go with Andem when he shows that the entire concept of the "standard of living" can be considered higher in Canada according to the UN. As the UN also takes in consideration for example the literacy rate and the life expectancy.