daftandbarmy
Army.ca Dinosaur
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This says it all in one Venn diagram
Lol I'm the minority on the hard blue side lolThis says it all in one Venn diagram
Except cities have, as I have shown, contributed greatly to the economic success of the provinces they are in.
Montreal providing 55 percent of Quebecs GDP. Toronto providing 54 percent. You want to get people in the cities to...not live in cities? Are small towns in the country ready for the influx of city dwellers descending on their communities? Is the infrastructure there? The housing, the jobs, the hospitals?
I doubt that very much. But it would be a great experiment to take 10 percent of Torontos populations and dump in in Wawa ontario.
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.
Why do I bring this up? Because this universal healthcare system is based on Quebec. Why does that matter? Because Quebec only provides 76 percent of all childcare spots in the province. This is a good blend of private and public. A good omen.
I get nothing out of this childcare deal.
When the top credit rating agencies stop considering Canadians debt amongst the top tier I will start to care.
I get 0 out of this childcare deal.
I guess you do not understand that if the economy grows faster than the debt accumulates it gets easier to service that debt.
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...
My personal opinion is the Government should be providing subsidies and Incentives to people who want to start childcare businesses in order to increase the supply in the market. This would help stimulate an Industry that people clearly want and need and encourage more people to start childcare businesses in Major Metropolitan areas.
For the record, Ontario hasn't received equalization payments since 2019-20 fiscal.Here's my only issue with equalization, there seems to be no mechanism to be turning have not provinces into have provinces. Why are there no targeted federal programs to encourage growth in economically weaker parts of the country, shouldn't we be growing Quebec and Ontario to be able to pay in instead of take out?
Perception isn’t always reality. Another reality is Kenney was part of the Harper Gvt when it created the current equalization formula.
there seems to be no mechanism to be turning have not provinces into have provinces.
Part of the problem is that politicians look for best vote for the money benefit and that is not in the areas that need the programs. We haven't had politicians at the provincial level who can see their province as a whole for a long time. I look at the work that WAC Bennett did in the 1960's and credit him with a lot of BC successes.Here's my only issue with equalization, there seems to be no mechanism to be turning have not provinces into have provinces. Why are there no targeted federal programs to encourage growth in economically weaker parts of the country, shouldn't we be growing Quebec and Ontario to be able to pay in instead of take out?
Okay.Here's my only issue with equalization, there seems to be no mechanism to be turning have not provinces into have provinces. Why are there no targeted federal programs to encourage growth in economically weaker parts of the country, shouldn't we be growing Quebec and Ontario to be able to pay in instead of take out?
It would be deemed unconstitutional.Certainly not as long as relative measures are used. If we were to look at "fiscal capacity" as a measure of the ability to meet some fixed set of responsibilities - without allowing mission creep to keep moving the target - we probably would have ended equalization long ago.
It would be deemed unconstitutional.Third option. Just end equalization, and let people figure out where they want to live, work, and pay taxes.
Okay.
And I wont say this to be condesending, but as a honest question.
How do you get the average wage and GDP per person in a place like PEI to a place like Ontario or Alberta? And how do you get Ontario and Alberta to not grow while PEI and Quebec catch up?
Either you pick favorites in confederation and go beyond what Equalization is meant to do, keep things equal, and that would involve even MORE money and renaming the program acceleration, in order to make Quebec and the Atlantic provinces grow much faster than the have provinces or you keep the current system where Quebec and the Atlantic provinces more or less keep up but are not gaining on the have provinces.
Yes, I'm aware NFLD isn't a barren wasteland, and they do have a lot of economic activity.Newfoundland is a massive exporter of resources and energy so I'm not sure where you got this from? Hibernia, Iron Ore Company of Canada, Churchill Falls.... ever heard of them?
Newfoundland's primary problem is it has always
liked to spend like a drunken sailor. Tbh though, most of the East Coast is the same.
High personal debt is bad, agreed. What to do about it however?As for debt, Canada's problem isn't necessarily high sovereign debt although that is becoming more of an issue. Our main issue is high personal debt, that when combined with high sovereign debt doesn't give us a lot of fiscal room to manoeuvre.
Then the debt load goes down more slowly. We are talking generally a percentage point here, a percentage point there, nothing world shattering in the grand scheme of things.This might not be a problem because as you say, if our economy grows and we are able to service the debt, no biggie. BUT...... and it's a big BUT....
What if our economic growth projections are overly optimistic?
I don't think immigration is reducing anytime soon.I actually think there are some factors that are going to begin coming in to play that haven't been accounted for or considered adequately, namely:
Aging Population
Supply Issues
Reduced Immigration
Inflation and Increased Cost of Living
I have no problem with that. Different options can be explored for sure, and the merits of them discussed.Higher childcare costs in larger cities are a direct result of lack of supply and increased cost of living. Think about it....
In order to provide child care as a service, what do you need?
The first thing you need is space and lots of it for kids to run around and play in. In smaller populated areas of Canada, a lot of childcare is provided by individuals out of there own homes. This is run as a small business venture. My Aunt did it for years, had a large house outside Saint John, NB and would look after 7 or 8 children on her own.
In large Cities this isn't nearly as prevalent because most people aren't living in large houses able to support this kind of small business, so already supply is impacted.
Then there is the fact that cost of living in those areas is also significantly higher, to the point that people don't have the ability to run a small childcare business because it just isn't lucrative enough to make it worth their time.
My personal opinion is the Government should be providing subsidies and Incentives to people who want to start childcare businesses in order to increase the supply in the market. This would help stimulate an Industry that people clearly want and need and encourage more people to start childcare businesses in Major Metropolitan areas.
I agree with you that childcare in large Cities is an issue worth examining, how I would tackle the problem would be different.
Parliament and the government of Canada are committed to the principle of making equalization payments to ensure that provincial governments have sufficient revenues to provide reasonably comparable levels of public services at reasonably comparable levels of taxation.Why should the average wage and GDP per person in PEI be like those in Ont or Alberta if PEI can't do that organically ?
Shouldn't this be what encourages people to strike out and make their own way ?
Parliament and the government of Canada are committed to the principle of making equalization payments to ensure that provincial governments have sufficient revenues to provide reasonably comparable levels of public services at reasonably comparable levels of taxation.I would say we are picking favorites by allowing certain provinces to expect to be kept afloat by an annual infusion of cash from others.