Ah yes, lets us all go back to the 1950s shall we?
You the people that fought and won two World Wars and didn't sit around feeling sorry for themselves afterwards? Yes, let's do that.
you have seen Alberta sending patients outside the province and the military coming in to help? Because they wanted to be left the eff alone and take personal responsibility during a pandemic, Welcome to confederation indeed. The bad stuff and the good stuff.
Yep. Alberta's population overwhelmingly supported stronger measures and the government didn't act. You know what they're going to do? Vote out a gov't that had one of the strongest majorities ever. Alberta's not going to sit around and feel sorry for themselves, they're not going to blame the Federal government.
That's without addressing the fact that 1. Alberta will be paying for those patients care from other provinces 2. Alberta has been feeding money into Confederation since it began, and hasn't received an equalization payment in over 50 years 3. Alberta was sending ventilators without being asked to other provinces out of goodwill when they were in trouble 4. It's still nowhere near the problems Ontario and Quebec faced in the first wave..... yet we're the bad guys and they're just going to get more support from the Feds for it.
And yet the rest of the country is just sitting there salivating at every misfortune Alberta has, asking for more and more when they won't even try to help themselves, it's disgusting.
Welcome to confederation, enjoy your stay.
Quebec will do what Quebec will do.
lol, put in a sales tax and balance the books in alberta, or don't and stop complaining about how the province is suffering from the oil crash.
If Alberta did away with income tax and then complained to the rest of the provinces that it couldn't balance the books, do you think that would be looked on favorably? Probably not.
Why don't you worry about working within your own means instead of chastising Alberta who's still got the best finances in the country? Don't bite the hand that feeds you buds, we'll take no tips from the guy that can't even sort out his own personal finances.
I don't see how a sales tax put in place in Alberta would benefit anyone outside of Alberta. So sales taxes get sent elsewhere? I'm curious. I know Alberta doesn't have a lot of experience with the concept but I don't think that's how sales taxes work.
Sales tax revenues goes to Alberta coffers, Alberta coffers to go to Federal coffers, Federal coffers go to Quebec. Like I said, while you want to ignore the sources of revenue, that's your own stupidity / desire to be a spoiled brat.
Okay, well, if you let me know what other metric I should use I'll use that. But poo pooing GDP and not presenting an alternative isn't very productive now is it?
I did.
aerospace, electronic goods, pharmaceuticals, printed goods, software engineering, telecommunications, textile and apparel manufacturing, tourism and transportation, civil, mechanical and process engineering, finance, higher education, and research and development.
Well, until it can be proven otherwise.
Okay, let's take your head out of the sand for a second:
"Calgary posted the highest net exports, while Toronto had the highest net imports."
In 2018, the five major census metropolitan areas in terms of trade—Toronto, Calgary, Montréal, Vancouver and Windsor—contributed to nearly 60% of Canada's total international merchandise trade. Calgary posted the highest net exports, while Toronto had the highest net imports.
www150.statcan.gc.ca
So in other words, in 2018 Calgary was increasing the wealth in the country, and Toronto was decreasing it.
Now stick your head back in the sand.
Right, so what do we do in the meantime? hmmm.
We leave it the fuck alone, and stop giving people reasons to stay in unsustainable situations, and let them make the choice to be poor in their current situation or move to places that actually contribute.
You talk about choices. In what scenario is having a person stuck at home raising a child when they want to be in the workforce considered more choices than giving someone the option to have access to affordable childcare freeing them up to work if they choose or stay home if they so desire?
The scenario where they were a willing participant is making children, the way most children are made.
You asked about what me and my partner would do... like I said, that's our business, but I'll tell you what we won't do. We won't do it flippantly and put ourselves in a situation that we can't afford the things we want most. That may include taking a hit on income, it may include moving to a different part of the country, it might include having kids later in life, it might include many things, it might even include not having
everything we want but knowing we're not entitled to everything, we won't make a plan that relies on the government to do it all for us.
Present your alternative.
There is no "single" measure of an economy. It has to be viewed as a whole.... although net exports is probably the best place to start, as I presented and you ignored.
Unless you want the federal government to start dictating provincial budgets, leave provincial debt out of the equation. Because even if the federal government gets it house in order and provinces do not, the cumulative debt levels would still rise and you would still complain.
As has been shown, unsustainable municipal debt becomes the province's problem (which is fine, since provinces own the municipalities), unsustainable provincial debt becomes a federal problem.... no, I don't want the feds to dictate provincial budgets, I want the feds to practice "peace, order, and
good governance" by making provinces sleep in the bed they make so that it doesn't become a national problem.
Except we have been printing money like mad and the currency is stable. Because everyone is printing money like mad, which means it doesn't effect the Canadian currency in any particular way. It would have been interesting if Canada didn't print money, because then you might get the case where the currency shot up in value making exports more expensive and suffering a shock to the system in that way.
Really? Last I read we were experiencing the highest inflation we've ever experienced? How did that work out for you and your savings for a house? What could have bought you a house, no longer can... the literal definition of inflation.
It's astounding that you are a victim of this poor strategy and can't see it.