Ah, good ol' socialism.It means we have to sacrifice all we have to be on par. It's not about bringing them up but cutting ourselves down.
Ah, good ol' socialism.It means we have to sacrifice all we have to be on par. It's not about bringing them up but cutting ourselves down.
Trudeau is using their elitist Charter Rights against them.Did you stop to think that maybe they're playing Trudeau?
Yup transfer of wealth as described in the Paris agreementIt means we have to sacrifice all we have to be on par. It's not about bringing them up but cutting ourselves down.
One of the root causes imo is that money has lost it's value and has become a superficial priority. Everyone has money and if they don't the banks are lined up to give them more than they need.You just waste it anyway , toys , boats , vacations , who needs them ?
I tried talking my 88 yr old father into applying for the 6 year no interest, no down payment new car program just to see if they would finance an 88 yr old living off his CPP.Got a job , got credit .
Planning on winning 6/49 is silly. Sensibly people have pinned it on Lotto Max.Any bets on how much worse our "fiscal update" is going to look form our last "fiscal snapshot?" When are we going to get an actual budget? Will the "fiscal update" balance itself?
Like people who have developed their retirement plan around the expectation of winning Lotto 649, I still believe that Trudeau is pinning all of his economic hopes for Canada on some kind of IMF debt jubilee. What an unimaginable, complete fool.
It continues to amaze me how comfortable Canadians have become having someone with the fiscal (and emotional) intelligence of a kindergarten student running the country.
And having a racist, banana-stuffing clown as leader who muses about rethinking concepts as basic as space and time, but can't even table a budget, let alone balance one....sensible or silly??Planning on winning 6/49 is silly. Sensibly people have pinned it on Lotto Max.
If you don't table a budget, you can't say it is not balanced.And having a racist, banana-stuffing clown as leader who muses about rethinking concepts as basic as space and time, but can't even table a budget, let alone balance one....sensible or silly??
The table is missing a leg .If you don't table a budget, you can't say it is not balanced.
The table was busted up and thrown on the pyre. Increased carbon taxes have made it necessarry to find cheaper ways to heat the joint.The table is missing a leg .
OTTAWA (Reuters) - Canada on Monday will unveil new spending plans and detail the cost of its emergency support measures as a harsh second wave of COVID-19 infections forces renewed health restrictions across the country.
The so-called Fall Economic Statement will be the first fiscal planning document drafted by Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland, who took over the role in August. Canada did not draft a budget this year due to uncertainty caused by the pandemic.
The document will include initial investments on green stimulus measures and there will be a "down payment" on a national childcare plan announced in September, sources said last week.
It is also expected to include new COVID-19 relief measures for hard-hit sectors. Freeland will plot what the government considers a sustainable path forward, focusing investments that are most likely to spur growth, sources said.
However, the ongoing emergency spending will likely mean a higher deficit than the C$343.2 billion ($264.4 billion) forecast in July.
"We don't really know what the take-up on the new aid programs is thus far," said Benjamin Reitzes, Canadian rates and macro strategist at BMO Economics.
Canada is in the middle of a severe second coronavirus wave with the seven-day rolling average of new cases well over 5,000 despite clamp downs.
But an economic rebound over the summer and recent promising vaccine news has brightened the medium-term outlook, and economists expect bigger stimulus spending will come in the 2021/22 budget due to be published during the first few months of next year.
The government "is in a good position. (It) can spend more before raising alarm bells," said Rebekah Young, director of fiscal and provincial economics at Scotiabank. "If they table a trajectory of debt going up and up, that could create some concerns, particularly from rating agencies."
($1 = 1.2981 Canadian dollars)
It's amazing, but many G20 countries today are putting all of their hopes on a "debt jubilee". They believe they have it all figured out this time, and through MMT (Modern Monetary Theory) can avoid the pitfalls of the past. These countries (including Canada and our buffoon that we have chosen for it's leader) believe that unlimited debt can be accrued, and not only will this not result in the destruction of their economy and their currency, but will actually make their country and their people more prosperous. MMT is the foundational principle of the IMF and Klaus Schwab's "Great Reset".At the end of World War One, it cost 4 German marks to buy a US dollar.
Unfortunately, the 1920 Versailles Treaty was not a well thought out document. The allies attempted to force the Germans to pay for the entire war. Reparations were extensive, paid by the year, forcing Germany into wild overspending and deep deficit.
By 1923, it cost 3 TRILLION German marks to buy an American dollar. Life savings were wiped out completely. Money was essentially completely useless. It was a disaster, and a major cause of the rage that led to the rise of the National Socialist German Workers' Party. (the Nazis)
Those who do not pay attention to history are doomed to repeat it.