Financial Post: Canadian economy is doing great as long as you don't need a permit

mentalfloss

Prickly Curmudgeon Smiter
Jun 28, 2010
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The Canadian economy is doing great as long as you don't need a permi

The way National Bank of Canada head Louis Vachon sees it, the economy is splitting into two extremes: There’s the “permit economy,” where resource and manufacturing companies face delays and roadblocks for project approvals. Then there’s the service and technology economy, mostly based in big cities, which is booming.

“The exports numbers generated by the ‘permit economy’ is below potential,” Vachon, who heads Canada’s sixth-biggest bank, said Friday in an interview. “Private investment in those sectors is below potential and it’s partly because of the difficulty in getting permits or the permits in time. In that segment of the economy I think we have issues of efficiency.”

Vachon sees the service industry doing “extremely well” across Canada.

“That’s why the major urban areas are booming and the startup scene is really accelerating in Canada,” said the chief executive officer of the Montreal-based bank. “The ambitions of entrepreneurs in Canada are much better aligned than they were five, 10 years ago.”

It’s a contrast from the traditional mainstays of the Canada economy, as companies like Kinder Morgan Canada Ltd. face protests over a US$5.9-billion pipeline expansion to the Pacific coast.

“If you want to build something — a plant or anything that you need a permit — it’s a little bit more difficult,” he said. “It doesn’t mean it doesn’t get done: just drive around Montreal; there’s a lot of infrastructure that’s getting done.”

The Canadian economy is doing great
 

Danbones

Hall of Fame Member
Sep 23, 2015
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You really are NOT in finance are you?

One in three Canadians say they are unable to cover monthly bills as rate hike looms

The MNP Consumer Debt Index and another study released on so-called Blue Monday paint a disturbing picture of how close Canadians are living to the edge, just before the Bank of Canada is expected to hike rates this week

One in three Canadians say they are unable to cover monthly bills as rate hike looms | Financial Post

Canada's economic growth has come at a price — its debt level is now highest in the developed world
http://business.financialpost.com/b...t-level-is-now-highest-in-the-developed-world

Canada is screwed...just like a weinstein actress.
Thanx trudie, you unbalanced...frisbee.

PS:
Infrastructure in Montreal...buying up the vote there are we..?
 

Dixie Cup

Senate Member
Sep 16, 2006
6,326
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113
Edmonton
You really are NOT in finance are you?

One in three Canadians say they are unable to cover monthly bills as rate hike looms

The MNP Consumer Debt Index and another study released on so-called Blue Monday paint a disturbing picture of how close Canadians are living to the edge, just before the Bank of Canada is expected to hike rates this week

One in three Canadians say they are unable to cover monthly bills as rate hike looms | Financial Post

Canada's economic growth has come at a price — its debt level is now highest in the developed world
Canada’s economic growth has come at a price

Canada is screwed...just like a weinstein actress.
Thanx trudie, you unbalanced...frisbee.


I'm seeing it every day at work. People losing their jobs and then living off of what little IE pays (depending on what they've earned), cashing in their RRSP's (if they have any) as well as savings and then using credit cards to supplement their incomes. Eventually, something's gotta give. What it gives me is job security and that's not a joke.


Dix
 

Cannuck

Time Out
Feb 2, 2006
30,245
99
48
Alberta
I'm seeing it every day at work. People losing their jobs and then living off of what little IE pays (depending on what they've earned), cashing in their RRSP's (if they have any) as well as savings and then using credit cards to supplement their incomes. Eventually, something's gotta give. What it gives me is job security and that's not a joke.


Dix

You should get them to move to southern Alberta. Can't find enough workers here.
 

Dixie Cup

Senate Member
Sep 16, 2006
6,326
4,028
113
Edmonton
You should get them to move to southern Alberta. Can't find enough workers here.



Most can't afford a bucket to pee in much less the funds to move elsewhere nor do they want to - god forbid that they go where the work is.... Besides, it's also "almost" always someone else's fault that they find themselves in the situation they're in.


And MF, as usual you have no clue of what you speak about. Seriously. You don't.


Dix
 

mentalfloss

Prickly Curmudgeon Smiter
Jun 28, 2010
39,817
471
83
Funny, all my quotes are from the same source as the OP. WHEN Interest rates go up it's all over.

You've just proven the problem right there.

It's your psychotic interpretation of the information that's the problem.
 

Cannuck

Time Out
Feb 2, 2006
30,245
99
48
Alberta
Most can't afford a bucket to pee in much less the funds to move elsewhere nor do they want to - god forbid that they go where the work is.... Besides, it's also "almost" always someone else's fault that they find themselves in the situation they're in.


And MF, as usual you have no clue of what you speak about. Seriously. You don't.

Everybody has an excuse
 

taxslave

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 25, 2008
36,362
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113
Vancouver Island
The Canadian economy is doing great as long as you don't need a permi

The way National Bank of Canada head Louis Vachon sees it, the economy is splitting into two extremes: There’s the “permit economy,” where resource and manufacturing companies face delays and roadblocks for project approvals. Then there’s the service and technology economy, mostly based in big cities, which is booming.

“The exports numbers generated by the ‘permit economy’ is below potential,” Vachon, who heads Canada’s sixth-biggest bank, said Friday in an interview. “Private investment in those sectors is below potential and it’s partly because of the difficulty in getting permits or the permits in time. In that segment of the economy I think we have issues of efficiency.”

Vachon sees the service industry doing “extremely well” across Canada.

“That’s why the major urban areas are booming and the startup scene is really accelerating in Canada,” said the chief executive officer of the Montreal-based bank. “The ambitions of entrepreneurs in Canada are much better aligned than they were five, 10 years ago.”

It’s a contrast from the traditional mainstays of the Canada economy, as companies like Kinder Morgan Canada Ltd. face protests over a US$5.9-billion pipeline expansion to the Pacific coast.

“If you want to build something — a plant or anything that you need a permit — it’s a little bit more difficult,” he said. “It doesn’t mean it doesn’t get done: just drive around Montreal; there’s a lot of infrastructure that’s getting done.”

The Canadian economy is doing great

That is because the totally out to of touch with reality citiots conntrol the process.
BTW there is no money in the so called service industry for the average worker.WHich is why we have such a high household debt problem.Resource industries and the ones that service them are the the only private sector jobs that make close to what government employees make.

You've just proven the problem right there.

It's your psychotic interpretation of the information that's the problem.

You are the one that has difficulty with reality.
 

Jinentonix

Hall of Fame Member
Sep 6, 2015
11,619
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Olympus Mons
The Canadian economy is doing great as long as you don't need a permi

The way National Bank of Canada head Louis Vachon sees it, the economy is splitting into two extremes: There’s the “permit economy,” where resource and manufacturing companies face delays and roadblocks for project approvals. Then there’s the service and technology economy, mostly based in big cities, which is booming.

“The exports numbers generated by the ‘permit economy’ is below potential,” Vachon, who heads Canada’s sixth-biggest bank, said Friday in an interview. “Private investment in those sectors is below potential and it’s partly because of the difficulty in getting permits or the permits in time. In that segment of the economy I think we have issues of efficiency.”

Vachon sees the service industry doing “extremely well” across Canada.

“That’s why the major urban areas are booming and the startup scene is really accelerating in Canada,” said the chief executive officer of the Montreal-based bank. “The ambitions of entrepreneurs in Canada are much better aligned than they were five, 10 years ago.”

It’s a contrast from the traditional mainstays of the Canada economy, as companies like Kinder Morgan Canada Ltd. face protests over a US$5.9-billion pipeline expansion to the Pacific coast.

“If you want to build something — a plant or anything that you need a permit — it’s a little bit more difficult,” he said. “It doesn’t mean it doesn’t get done: just drive around Montreal; there’s a lot of infrastructure that’s getting done.”

The Canadian economy is doing great
You really are pathetic Flossy. You just couldn't copy these last two short paragraphs because they don't jive with the bullshit you're trying to push.
He argues that both sectors are related and necessary for a healthy economy, and uses a familiar analogy to illustrate his point.

“You cannot have new apps without iPhones and without lithium and without graphite and without energy to operate,” Vachon said. “So over the very long term the permit and the non-permit economy are related.

Of course you also selectively edited out the very first line in the article as well.
Canada has a permit problem — and it’s hurting the economy.

Why do you feel the need to lie about shit by selectively editing the info that you C&P? This is FAR from the first time you've done it too. Are you simply a habitual liar or is it more of a pathological problem?
 

Danbones

Hall of Fame Member
Sep 23, 2015
24,505
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You've just proven the problem right there.

It's your psychotic interpretation of the information that's the problem.

LOL, hey get out of that mirror...I'm over here!
;)
admiring all your "Trump will be indicted", and "global warming makes it colder" threads.

Ooops, I slipped on the green thumb I gave you up there, that should be THREE red thumbs down!
 

Jinentonix

Hall of Fame Member
Sep 6, 2015
11,619
6,262
113
Olympus Mons
LOL, hey get out of that mirror...I'm over here!
;)
admiring all your "Trump will be indicted", and "global warming makes it colder" threads.
Two things I've learned about flossy from here and CKA. He's a liar. He regularly selectively edits his cut and pastes to omit information that does not conform to the lie he's pushing. And when you call him out on his bullshit, he usually offers up an ad hominem or something equally banal.
One thing you'll never see him do though is defend his position. He can't. He hasn't got the intellectual capacity for it so he just echoes whatever his ideological masters tell him. Or rifles off an ad hominem.