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The spaces will balance themselves.How, exactly? I kept reading talking points about this but could never find out the "how" behind this claim?
The spaces will balance themselves.How, exactly? I kept reading talking points about this but could never find out the "how" behind this claim?
The money the provinces get is dependent on the spots being rented is my understanding.How, exactly? I kept reading talking points about this but could never find out the "how" behind this claim?
Unless you are fishing for this kind of informative answer.The spaces will balance themselves.
The money the provinces get is dependent on the spots being rented is my understanding.
Quebec has a system in place where they supply 76 percent of all daycare spots in the province, and the real estate market isn't significantly worse off than in Ontario or BC.So commercial real estate is at a premium in downtown Toronto, Vancouver, Montreal, and the provincial government now needs to either use thes scarce space available to build more spaces or rent all the space that exists?
having parents pay 24k a year or forced to stay home seems like a dumber decision.This does not seem like a smart way to address supply issues.
Except costs are far lower in Quebec.This seems to again throw more money at the problem and will increase the costs in the long-run...
I wish people didn't act like this system wasn't field tested in Canada for 25 years.as government subsidies always do. Except now it's going to bleed into every single business as well, and seriously handicap start-ups.
Quebec has a system in place where they supply 76 percent of all daycare spots in the province, and the real estate market isn't significantly worse off than in Ontario or BC.
having parents pay 24k a year or forced to stay home seems like a dumber decision.
I wish people didn't act like this system wasn't field tested in Canada for 25 years.
having parents pay 24k a year or forced to stay home seems like a dumber decision.
Damn, costs are going up fast. A few days ago someone was talking about 20K...
While there is going to be new spots created in the system, I suspect a lot of it is going to be existing spaces that are going for these absurd prices being rolled into the provincial system.I'll go take a look, we don't hear about commercial real estate much I'm not sure what I could find. In saying that, there could literally be a 1000+ things that are affecting the market price of commercial real estate that help bring it down. The approach shouldn't be to do a single variable analysis to compare commercial real estate markets in different provinces. The question is, would commercial real estate be cheaper in Montreal if tomorrow, all those subsidized daycare spaces went away? I have no idea how much real estate it actually uses up, and it's impact on the local market, to equip a city like Montreal.... but it's certainly worth considering. Or not, since the cities can then just whine until everyone is in Canada gets forced by vote-chasing politicians to pay for that, too.
Everyone move to Quebec!Living in a city where it costs that much for childcare seems like a dumber decision. I guess we'll add that to my list of things people in urban centerswantfeel entitled to without the necessary income.
Except for childcare increasing female workplace participation leading to an increase in female workplace participation which leads to increased economic activity, but we have have been down this conversation before.Without going down this rabbit hole again, the more points you make the more convinced I am that these urban centers are heading down the same welfare trap as rural Newfoundland.... and now the province is on the brink of insolvency with seemingly no road to climb out since everyone feels entitled to government support for everything and is even having trouble borrowing now because it looks so bleak.
Quebec was a fiscal basket case before putting in universal healthcare and they have been doing better in the decades since putting it in.Admittedly I've always found their system intriguing but never understood it enough. I've seen some interesting numbers but I'm skeptical... considering that until the Liberals blew up Ontario, Quebec had the highest debt-to-GDP ratio for a long long time. They do not exactly have a good track record on fiscal management, they were a train wreck despite a completely unfair equalization program that skews to their favour heavily.
I've said it before and I'll say it again,While you may choose to ignore the sources of revenue that leads to Federal government equalization payments (which is a pretty foolish thing to do), when the overall debt load becomes too high and all of Canada has become entitled to our unsustainable entitlements and put us in a situation where even the Federal government can no longer provide support, do you think Canada is going to receive equalization money from other countries?
Or we can do what we have done in the past, without foreign intervention.I guess global superpowers like China might be interested in helping us out.... with many, many strings attached.
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Citing the most expensive data point didn't strengthen your point. The people already paying for high-end child care are unlikely to qualify for much in the way of subsidy. If they do, it's a piss-poor implementation on the politicians' part.
Quebec has a system in place where they supply 76 percent of all daycare spots in the province, and the real estate market isn't significantly worse off than in Ontario or BC.
having parents pay 24k a year or forced to stay home seems like a dumber decision.
Except costs are far lower in Quebec.
I wish people didn't act like this system wasn't field tested in Canada for 25 years.
People paying for high end childcare who like what they are paying for will likely stay in the private system, assuming their daycare doesn't get rolled up in the public system.Citing the most expensive data point didn't strengthen your point. The people already paying for high-end child care are unlikely to qualify for much in the way of subsidy. If they do, it's a piss-poor implementation on the politicians' part.
People live in cities, surprise surprise. Canada gets more urban every year that goes by.
Except for childcare increasing female workplace participation leading to an increase in female workplace participation which leads to increased economic activity, but we have have been down this conversation before.
Debt to GDP of the G7
Germany (85), USA (108), the UK (111.5),France (118), Italy (160), Japan, (260).
All these nations are among the top economies on the planet and they are all pilling on debt as well. Are you concerned about who is going to bail out Japan, or Italy? Or is Canada unique in its inability to service its debt?
It would be completely typical I guess, that Canada can spend hundreds of billions a year, and borrow tens of billions a year, but try to help working class Canadians to the tune of a 6 billion dollar annual childcare program and suddenly there is talk of being far too indebted. Well, make cuts to the 29 billion dollars that go to corporate subsidies annually and call it even, I really do not care.
Or we can do what we have done in the past, without foreign intervention.
Okay, lets do it.Altair - I really don't want to pick a fight but somethings demand they be addressed.
I didn't have my child in Quebec. My spouse stayed at home to care for them. So....no.I understand that you like the set of circumstances that provide for you in Quebec. But not all of us live in Quebec. Some of us find ourselves living in places like Alberta.
Alberta also has a higher average income, collects more taxes per capita, has a younger population thus not needing to support as many elderly people, and has a lower overall tax burden. Alberta made the choice to not have a sales tax of which proceeds could go towards things like child care. Alberta crying poor is really rich. Even with the oil crash and job losses it still has among the highest average incomes in the nation.Alberta could, no doubt, have afforded to provide some of those services that you enjoy. But it was made harder by the net tendency of money to flow out of the province to the federal government and on to other provinces. There seemed to be a lot less of that money left here to be able to buy goods either publically or on the private market.
Trans mountain will be done in a year I think? 2? KeystoneXL was done in by president of the USA? What do you want?But they have not been improved by the policies of the federal government, and some of our sister provinces, making it harder for us to make money from foreigners. Money that could then be used by the federal government to make other provinces better provisioned.
Again, despite everything, Alberta is still one of the most wealthy jurisdictions in Canada. Average salary 77k a year compared to the Canadian average of 58k.Nor have they been improved by the fact that, despite money being harder to come by these days, the federal government still considers that we should continuing contributing to the federal coffers at the same rate as when we were making money so that they can continue to supply cash to other provinces.
This is getting further and further away from childcare I notice.It is true that the federal government is doing its bit to find other sources of revenue, such as printing money and borrowing money.
Further and further away.The has had the effect of increasing the price of our oil. Unfortunately the value of that oil, the number of lettuces it can buy and the number of roofs it can supply, are decreasing.
I never got it and my kid is in school now so I never will.So, please, continue to enjoy your services.
Put in a sales tax and stop complaining.Meanwhile, here in Alberta, we'll figure something out, eventually.
Slainte Mhor.
They do. Same a nurses and doctors deserve a proper wage.Why do people think that the cost of child care is absurd and unreasonable?
Don’t the female employees who generally provide the service deserve a proper wage?
Why do people think that the cost of child care is absurd and unreasonable?
Don’t the female employees who generally provide the service deserve a proper wage?
Except cities have, as I have shown, contributed greatly to the economic success of the provinces they are in.Yes, why wouldn't they when they can get all the perks and not have to pay for them? We're creating a vicious cycle by then feeding that choice with more money. Exactly like rural Newfoundland where given they can have the benefits of small-town life and the amenities of urban life brought right to them, courtesy of taxpayers. Which over time has now led to a situation where they're spiraling out of control, having trouble lending any further, begging for federal help.... and of course, as they say, they don't want handouts, only what is "fair." Sound familiar?
The reason that Canadian healthcare sucks so bad is because we are have locked the private sector out of the equation. Europe achieves amazing results blending private and public healthcare. Americans receives mediocre healthcare results by not providing a effective public option and Canada achieves mediocre results by not allowing for much of a private option.Like I said, I'm interested in public support to childcare, but I'm skeptical.... universal healthcare is a great dea too, yet we have found the most unsustainable, worst way in the OECD to do it which is by using Federal spending powers... the same way we're about to go about implementing national childcare. And once a system implemented, like our healthcare system has proven, we're too stupid to analyze if it's working and change course as required. Perhaps Quebec's worked to net benefit because they did it fully in-house, provincially?
I get nothing out of this childcare deal.No, Canada is not unique, and yes I am concerned about the path western democracies are headed down. Yes, those countries and Canada are currently able to service their debt. But the situation doesn't seem to be getting better and yet we're piling on more public spending, in particular programs that are pretty much impossible to turn off. I'm thinking long-term here and you're thinking about your personal wants.
When the top credit rating agencies stop considering Canadians debt amongst the top tier I will start to care.This paragraph is a bunch of bullshit and shows you aren't interested in actually discussing the topic, just your own selfish wants. Debt hasn't "suddenly" become a problem, many of us have been sounding off about it for years. I've been advocating to stop the corporate welfare for probably 10 years.
I get 0 out of this childcare deal.Stop making strawman's because you don't want to think of the long-term consequences that are inconvenient to your wants.
I guess you do not understand that if the economy grows faster than the debt accumulates it gets easier to service that debt.I guess you don't understand that debt accumulates over time. In no time in the past have we had so much debt, and in no time in the past have we had such high spending and such high deficits. These are apples and melons.
Newfoundland is a poor example. Its doesn't have a very industrialized economy. It doesn't have massive resource exports. It doesn't have a massive financial sector. But sure, why not take Newfoundland and apply it writ large across the nation? Why not use PEI next? Or Yukon...Fact of the matter is, Newfoundland is showing what happens to people who think these are all just numbers on papers. Except, as I said, when it's scaled up and it's Canada that's in the same boat, there won't be a higher level government to fall back on. We'll either have to pay the piper, or we'll be welcoming foreign actors to buy our sovereignty. And Canadians will be so personally weak and unable to take personal responsibility, they'll probably choose the latter.