We're over taxed. Housing prices are through the rough and we manufacture nothing. We sell our natural resources and buy them back at a higher price. Yah just great.
Well...the natural resources we can get to market. We can't even get our own oil from Alberta to any domestic refineries. I doubt a new pipeline will ever get built.
Coming from a developing country myself and migrating to Canada, I could see the big difference a developed country like Canada runs its system more efficiently. Yeah taxes are high here but you could clearly see the difference in terms of how the government serves its people through social services and infrastructure.
Haha I know your from hopeless Philippines, where self-serving politicians are more atuned to elitism and privilege. Economic developments we have here are only urban sprawls and nothing else. No real social or structural improvements. A city is said to be doing good simply because it now has bigger population, period!
Thank you Canada for being so welcoming to immigrants. Its my 6th year now and I came here as a student when I was 18. I have lived in all three major cities in Canada, I started in Toronto and spent 4 years in Montreal studying French, 6 months in PEI and ended up living in Vancouver). I'm a motocycle enthusiast and I visited so many incredible places like from west Windsor/Detroit US border to the east where you can see the most spectacular water dam in Quebec Canada. I drove my car across Canada this summer. (Quebec Ontario Manitoba Saskatchewan Alberta and finally the beautiful British Columbia) Thank you again for such an amazing life experience. It's been a great honor.❤
Slight correction from a Canadian, at 8:30 you said “when the American economy catches a cold, Canada sneezes”, the saying is actually the other way around. We say “when America sneezes, Canada catches a cold”. Oh, and sorry for bringing it up eh.
Wrong. In 2008 America caught the flu and went rock bottom. Canada's economy was fine. It took a dip just like most of the world did but it escaped the great recession.
@@TonyMontanaDS Your right and wrong. The crash of 2008 caused the Canadian stock market to closely mirror that of the U.S.A. Portfolios and pensions were devastated for many, including myself. Fortunately, due to a very different banking system and mortgage qualification criteria, the Canadian housing market was protected and far less interrupted. 2008 was a rare instance where Canada just got a cold and the U.S.A got pneumonia.
I am a Chinese international student, i have been studying in Canada for 7 years. Compared with the United States, Canadian society is more tolerant of immigrants, there is less racial discrimination, and people are very friendly and kind. Love Canada from China, I really miss the time when I lived in Canada.
Well in the 90s, Richmond was avoided and the main road was known as the Ho Chi Minh Trail, do to new drivers and the need to avoid the booby traps, that has changed and those comments are never heard anymore.
@@pololedodo7981 what does she have to do with what her government does ? Should we be blaming you for Canada’s many residential school massacre’s too?
This is the first time outside of Canadian political economy books that I've seen someone mention the staples thesis and its impact on Canada's economy, politics, and civil society. I don't think most Canadians have ever even heard of (arguably) the most significant guiding idea in this country!
Canada wouldn't have such a slow population growth is a tiny small house wasn't around 2 million dollars. If you can't even afford to survive why would you want to bring a life into this world so they can suffer. Canada needs to have better wage regulations to keep the middle class going. I also say this as someone that makes nearly 3 times the average wage and still can't afford a house.
All Thanks to the unregulated spending by our prime minister trudeau and equally weak and incompetent opposition , ive always voted liberal since i came to this country but not anymore unless they change their policies and do something about housing prices , hate "CONS" so the only option left for people like me is N.D.P 🤷🏻♂️
Honestly I'd look at the USA if I were you. A house here in Canada on average will cost you double what you would pay in the US. And the wages a much lower too. Canada is just an expensive resort place to spend some vacation in. Definitely not live here imo. Saying this as a Canadian.
The youth of Canada are screwed. They either have a massive mortgage (financed by their parents), or pay exorbitant rent which consumes their income. Either way, there are no savings for retirement. The country is so screwed for the future.
It's not that bad. If you can avoid living around Vancouver or Toronto you should be fine. I just bought my first house, 30 minutes for the second largest city (2014, 4 bedroom, 13sqf ward, garage and everything), and I won't be crumbling under the mortgage. If you have a good skill job or if you studied in a meaningful/useful field you should be fine.
Live in Canada... Dad had to have his thyroid removed, go on meds then have a diseased heart-valve removed all within 6 months... cost him nothing except the TV we kept buying for him ($30 a day is a lot man...) while he recovered in hospital. Brother had a completely shattered ankle, needed several specialists to piece it back together, 20 steel rods, 6 months of pain and agony and it cost $400 for some nice comfy crutches. If for nothing else, I love this country for that. I, thankfully, have not needed it's help nearly as much but I am infinitely grateful that if something happens, it will not be the financial ruin of me, regardless of my income.
What shocked me is how much it costs for those _not_ covered by our healthcare system. I had a roommate who was an international student who's health insurance hadn't kicked in yet. He slipped on an apple and broke his ankle. He had a bunch of X-Rays done, had a cast made, and got a set of crutches. Including the ER visit in the middle of the night, the cost to him was... $1,500. The crutches were only $40. I'm very curious to know how much a similar visit would have cost in the US...
@@romeomontana238 I have never had any major health issues but if I do... glad to be in Canada, are you implying you would rather be in the US, pay taxes *and* hope your work has good insurance or get your own?
@@romeomontana238 I... Reverse engineered your taxes and if you are paying $3200 in Federal taxes.. you are making around 180k a year.. Otherwise if you are paying a combined $3200 in federal and provincial taxes you are earning about $125k a year. So.... you have my sympathies? All this is pending you live in Ontario of course.
@@romeomontana238 how conceited do you have to be to make a good story about people getting medical help, not having to go bankrupt because of a decent medical system and then make it about you? And more specifically a complaint about how much taxes you have to pay. Please, find another country, Canada doesn't need your type.
For the healthcare in Canada; I never really needed to go the hospital my whole life. Then one time 3-4 years ago I needed a massive surgery that would have put me back 250k canadian. I know because it was literally written on the walls of the hospital how much the fees would be if I did not have my health card. All to say, maybe Canadian health care is not the best but, it sure as hell saved my life and my wallet. For that i’m eternally grateful. Go Canada!🎉🇨🇦
Okay I got a free surgery from being hit be a car and the retards used a massive screw for my ankle...okay like a third the size of that and the surgery was only 1200
@@adaptercrash many health care professionals in the whole system and some better than others that’s for sure. Sorry to hear your surgery didn’t go as well as it could have.
@@alexyoung2104 they bad man my stepsister had a terrible surgery I been to school and their pre med bachelor is a joke compared to mine they ain't academic I've had one good experience with a stomach infection where they actually did a good job but man you still pay for the anti biotic and know you need them its just a testing process to get prescription that's if you can get past triage honestly I had to go to Walmart clinic for that and the hospital just didn't care I can't even follow up on being ran over go to the clinic it's all retards with kids who will be fine in a few days i as sick all the time as a kid and went there twice cause of bacterial inflammation and pink eye
As an international student in Canada, I agree. Studying here in Canada is not cheap, and it comes with lots of restrictions and penalties, but unlike the USA, there's a pathway towards residency after graduation which makes all the investment and hassle of studying abroad worth it.
Studying in Canada is cheap for people who have Canadian nationality. I'm a french Quebecer and university cost like 10 to 20 times less than in the US because government just pay for it.
11:59 Tourism struggles for a a few reasons, but one reason that is seldom mentioned is the vast distances. People who come as tourists do not have time to travel to more than one or two interesting destinations. The travel time to go to many sites is prohibitive. This is exacerbated by the great lack of mass transit outside of large urban areas. No high speed continental trains for instance.
High speed trains like in Japan or Europe would be pointless in Canada. The tourism season is too short and the consumer base is too small. It will be extremely expensive to build and maintain such a system anyway.
If they gave you lemon, make lemonade! People should come and visit one city or region at a time, then come back again …..develop some travel products or concept that attract visitors to come back a second time, just like Europe! Sell the region, not the country.
As a Canadian who thinks we have a long way to go if we want to live up to being everyone's favorite country... it's really weird seeing people praise us for doing the bare minimum 😅If we're the nice country, it sometimes scares me to think of what it's really like elsewhere. I keep up with international affairs, but haven't ever actually left Canada, and I really feel like we don't live up to all of our positive stereotypes. We do all live in igloos though!
I 100% agree, with how much oil, lumber and other natural resources combined with how many immigrants are coming here I would think we should have a lot more money. In Vancouver the cost of living is so high it really doesn't matter if you make 100k a year if it costs 100k a year to live. I think a lot of our problems are how much we discount the US. Vancouver is one of the largest places to film in NA, for a little bit during Covid is was the most filmed place in NA. The reason is Canada gives the film studios a lot of tax breaks to film around here. The question is why are Americans getting huge tax breaks instead of the US? Not to mention so many other resources we cheaply share with the US. It really comes down to Canada has no ambition to either sell what we have for better cost, or come up with something that is worth a higher cost that would boost the economy.
One of the reason is that you haven't experienced the worse countries. In my home country, any bigger disease / visiting to ICU could make your whole family be bankrupt; You would pay similar tax rates, but get nothing from government; You may be bullied by local wealthy people but no way to protect your family; You may be not able to study in University since someone hijack your accepting letter; You are not allowed to use RUclips/Google... Too many to list. Overall, no country is 100% excellent, but Canada is close to the excellent one.
I find Europeans and East Asians to be much kinder than Canadians from personal experience as a Canadian who enjoys travelling. Canadians keep to themselves in cliques where they feel safe surrounded by friends, while the other groups I mentioned are welcoming and curious with foreigners. I think the narrative of Canada as the fav country is based on outdated stereotypes from folks like Bob and Doug Mackenzie. The only difference between a Canadian and American is the American will actually say what they're thinking.
Excellent video! I'm an American biz owner in Washington state that has been trying to partner up with Canadian firms to do business in the US, but it sure isn't easy. I completely agree that the Canadian govt needs to focus on entrepreneurship.
I'm an international student in Hamilton, Ontario and can validate that I love this place and i hope I can make this amazing country with amazing people my home permanently!
"Canada needs to invest in its people - not by showering more social benefits over them, but by promoting a culture of entrepreneurial mindsets and innovation." Speaking as a born and bred Canadian, we don't suffer from a lack of entrepreneurial spirit. What's happening is that we don't have enough discretionary income, therefore, we're risk-averse. Cost of living has increased faster than wages, especially when it comes to housing, both home ownership and rent. Living in areas that well away from Toronto/Vancouver does create more discretionary income, but prices are increasing everywhere at this point. So long as you're being frugal, you can still save a fair amount, yet saving is undeniably a slower process these days when over half of your annual salary goes to basic needs. Considering the first bulk of savings goes to emergency funds and a future down payments, saving up for anything else happens later in life.
Great point. Big enough discretionary income does not necessarily encourage entrepreneurship. I think it is more of a cultural and a mind set thing. I think the government needs to do more in terms of incentives and programs to encourage and support innovative ventures that will grow the economy. But then again, with good social and health benefits, why would her citizens move a muscle. It is not just peculiar to Canada, it it a human tendency.
This is something I completely agree on an have argued in the past, but I think you have said it better. There are a lot of resources that I think we could make more on, but discount to the states for very cheap, which is somewhat okay because we rely off them as much as or more than they rely off us. However one thing we don't have that the US does is that ambition to just make money and drive an economy. Most people here don't care about being Mark Cuban or whatever rich person from the US, they just want to work a decent salary and take care of their family. There's nothing wrong with taking care of your family, but if we encouraged ambition more, or just had more of it I think we could have such a great economy. Personally one thing I would do is lower the funding we give to welfare and decrease the cost of schooling for Canadians. Welfare in some cases will pay for school, but if you aren't on welfare your stuck racking up debt which to me seems unfair and imbalanced. Why does someone who gets part of their rent paid and monthly subsidies get school subsidized while other low income people are left to get a loan and be in debt after school. Welfare is a horrible system in it's current state anyways. It's short term help, every month people need another check to survive off welfare. Investing in cheaper schooling is long term help. After graduating you can get a job and aren't dependent on the government. Public colleges aren't too bad, but big Universities and private schools are still very daunting and could use some work. Even just creating a system where no scholarship gets left unrewarded would really help, since so many scholarships never even get used.
Yeah that last part seemed very ideological to me too. We have plenty of entrepreneurs, believe me. What we instead need is to get our cost of living under control. You want to encourage entrepreneurship and more effective investment? Let's try to make it cheaper to actually live in the major cities! However, that sort of issue can only be solved by diligent nationwide urban planning. For example, we need to encourage people to move more to cities outside just Toronto, Montreal and Vancouver. Provinces and feds should do more to make these other cities just as big and fun. If the population is more spread out, you'll see costs naturally become more reasonable.
Couldn't have put it better myself, that final word segment left me with the exact same sentiment. If people are learning from this video, this comment has to be at the top.
Has been living 5 years in Vancouver, now planning to move to the US due to high prices for living. Simple house costs around 1.5M $ which makes it impossible to buy for single household with the income of 100k.
I’ve been an International student here for 2 years and working here for 1 year now. Undoubtedly it’s the best country on this planet. Warm welcoming people, amazing places to visit and most importantly respectful in every terms. Canada you have my heart ❤️ God bless Canada 🇨🇦
"Having a good welfare system does not make a country Socialist". That's a (very) simple point many Americans (USA) have a hard time wrapping their mind around.
Good reply. Americans can seldom wrap their "minds" around anything which isn't home grown. Pity, they used to lead the world with progresssive ideas from which we all benefitted. Now it's neo-fascist shambles, similar to many African dictatorships. So what if a country chooses socialst programs anyway? Does the sky fall? What childishness!
@@robertscott537 I disagree with that comment to some degree. The US under Biden is leading the world with a Global tax rate against huge corporations to end or limit tax havens. So there are still some progressive ideas. I would also argue that social programs are quite popular here and have much support. For example, the latest American Families Plan that is said to be passed with the infrastructure bill has majority public support. It is said to be the largest expansion in the US social safety net in 50 years. I think the only people who are against social programs are the republicans. They are the ones to quickly label things as socialist or communist. Why listen to them, when they are not even in power?
@@chrisb9996 The largest expansion of the social safety net just in time for Biden to grant amnesty and citizenship to all the illegals in the US before the next election, all but guaranteeing they vote Democrat? Talk about buying votes with other peoples money
Great video. Canadian here. You got almost everything correct. Best I have ever seen with an internet video. Great part with diversification. Got me thinking. We sure do love to protect our favourite companies. Something to think about.
also off question OK if you go to Canada country OK and I buy vehicle over there then went I want to go back to my home country to visit friends and family member what will happen to the vehicle???????????thank you for help sorry for bad english
As a farmer in anada, I would like to say that climate change, has in my lifetime alone, shown to help us but long term will screw everyone. We plant corn with a 20% yield compared to what was being planted here 20 years ago. Heck, 25 years ago Soybeans in our area we're unheard of but are grown plentiful here.
I haven't sniffed a 100 dollar bill in a while, but I remember when we first minted our new polymer bills they definitely did have a sweet maple aroma. Though I don't find any of the smaller denominations share the same sweet sent as the $100 do.
So you haven’t sniffed $100 bill eh? Good for you ! Have you ever sniffed a hockey player’s underwear? Do you know what a igloo full of unwashed Inuit smell like after they have been in there for eight months? Make some more bullshit up!
@@Hezzey Ahh you got me! I sniff fat stacks of those sweet maply $100 bills at least twice a day, once while riding my moose to work at Tim Hortons and also when I'm rubbing one out to that picture of Justin Trudeau hanging on my wall, I cant believe you saw through my deceitful lies 😂
@@The_Bear21 born, raised and still living in eastern canada (which would be 44 years 😁), i've never heard anyone say "eh" ... lol! i have no idea where it comes from ... i remember little sketches that rick moranis and another comedian used to do in the 80s or 90s, a sort of parody comedy bit, and they were constantly saying "eh" with a very exaggerated accent, which sort of stuck, and the characters they were portraying were from edmonton - i don't even think albertans talk like that (i wouldn't know, i've never been), but i honestly think it's a totally stereotypical thing about canada that's just made up 😅
I have lived in Canada since 1972. This is an extremely accurate summary of the Canadian condition. I agree completely with your constructive suggestions for improving that condition.
Canada 🇨🇦; by far my most favorite country in the world 🌎. I literally fell in love with this country back in my high school days in the early 90s; eversince, Canada got stuck in my mind for many years now. The more I see stories about Canada, the more I just want to go to Canada 🇨🇦😫. I have stacks of books 📚 about Canada; travel, economy and politics that I have been reading for many years. I love Canada! 🇨🇦♥
Another thing that should have been mentioned in the segment "Canada is an Energy Superpower" is that we are also a major producer electricity. Per capita, we're some of the biggest producers and consumers of energy. A very large portion of primary aluminum transformation on the north American continent happens in Quebec because of just how cheap and readily available electricity is. Just as there are oil pipelines to the US, there are also a number of electrical interconnections. We've still got massive untapped electrical generation potential. Given the right conditions, we could be a major partner in decarbonising the US. This is something that provincial governments are rather keen on.
We pay the usa to take some of our power when we overproduce and storage is full. We need better leaders to make us our own rich country rather than piggy back the us
@@aboudhh I don't think you really understand how the power grid actually works. There are many reasons why most interconnections are between Canada and the US. #1 Distances are shorter between Canadian and US cities than between Canadian cities. There is quite literally 1500 kms of nothing in northern Ontario. It is much easier to connect to the US grid. #2 Our grid are perfect negatives of each other. The US need more power during summer, and we need more power during winter. While we mostly export power, we actually import a small quantity during the coldest days of the year. #3 We actually make a lot of money selling electricity. We're talking billions per year. On a provincial budget, that makes a big difference.
I came to Canada from China; When I was child, I don't enough food; I had to walk almost 5 hours to high school one way trip, and brought pickles to school because couldn't afford meals. Now in Canada I have a 3000 ft^2 house and investment properties. So grateful for everything I have.
Do you actually do anything positive for the community or just TAKE TAKE TAKE from them like the vast majority of other successful people in Canada? All I hear is the typical "Grew up or moved here back in the good o'l days made a bunch of money bought a bunch of AFFORDABLE rental property and now Instead of doing anything positive for for my community I simply charge them twice as much for rent....Genius!" And now you all see why young people are in the situation we are in... Greedy scumbags
K D All good questions. Founder of Barrick, the biggest gold producer in the world, he starved at home country and shocked at how much food on table after came to Canada when he was a child. He worked very hard all his life and donated a lot of his fortunes to charity. Good role model.
I appreciate you mentioning the price of goods varying throughout the country. As someone who lives in Toronto, a cone of ice cream can cost $8 CAD, while in Halifax it can be $4 dollars. Great point to touch on.
@@bevvy.bee9 Why do you think western manufacturing moved over seas? It's because companies could get away with paying Chinese and Indian workers less then American workers. This is true regardless of which currency you use.
@@GreenGiant400 yeah but that's what happens when wages increase, they move manufacturing oversees where wages are low. People in developed nations then move to service based industries that usually require you to be educated
@@bevvy.bee9 Average wages haven't increased since the 70s (accounting for inflation). Jobs left not because of increased wages but because of an increasingly globalized market which has fewer restrictions on it, as well as the industrial development of countries like China. It's an arrangement that has worked out well for the west since they can take advantage of hyper exploited labour to make cheap products without fear of the political backlash that would come from your own population if they were that exploited.
If the West would take back the entirety of its industries the 2nd and 3rd world would go into crisis as well as countries like South Korea.The devellopment that happened in Asia and Africa is mainly due to trade with the West.
Thanks. Great video. High cost of living means often both parents work and spend longer time in education to earn more. This combined with high child care costs solves the mistery of low birth rates. Even with socialised health care and education, parents in many regions simply can't afford to feed and house big families.
To add having an older work force that doesn't retire means younger adults that go into any field get stuck at lower wages because theres no upward momentum in any job. Most people max out their wage at 3-5 years at a company and are stuck till someone retires. Making the income for a young adult house hold less, making it harder to buy a house have a family ect. that older generations already have and just sitting back on what they make. Every job I've had or friends in the last 12 years, upper positions are people from 40-65 and anyone working there from 20-30 are stuck and usually end up leaving. Young adults don't like working at a place where it seems they will have to work there for the next 25 years just to get into a position of upper management. Thats a mortgage length of time that they wont even be able to afford a mortgage.
interesting overview of Canada's Economy. Wondering if you will do another video about the future of Canada's Economy in this rapidly changing world where the balance of power is shifting and perhaps our neighbour to the south is losing it's position as Top Dog.
We're already starting to see the effects of this. Canada is increasingly moving towards multipolar trade deals, whether it be with Pacific countries through the PRFTA or with Atlantic entities like the EU and UK through EUFTA and CANZUK. I think the big Cheetoh really drove home to the federal government how much our country is vulnerable to American strong-arming when he used tariffs and trade shutdowns to force through USMCA and shredded NAFTA.
@@uchennanwogu2142 As the U.S. loses power. Canada takes its economic interests elsewhere. IE international trade deals and businesses of non American origin. It's a natural thing that has happened countless times before to many countries through out history. Canada will take its investment and trade elsewhere to ensure continued economic growth.
From personal experience in the Canadian healthcare system currently living in Quebec.... Sure, the Canadian healthcare system ain't perfect, but at least it's there when you need a doctor fast, I was rushed to a nearby hospital for emergency surgery fast, spent a few hours in the ER but was quickly moved to the ICU, I almost kicked the bucket, but got operated fast, as soon as I regained conscieness ( sorry for the spelling ) I was ok and made it and soon recovered, after a few weeks on a hospital bed, I was sent back home, took some time but I made it... If it had been in the US or a privatized place then I was a gonner for sure, or just ended up living in the streets and end up broke with only the clothes I'd still wearing, nothing else... Trust me, the healthcare system in Canada saved my life many times, it's not perfect and needs a lot of more people now as the personal there are working in impossible conditions nowadays, especially in the ER and the ICU and the Pandemics really didn't helped at all, all it did was making the working condition a lot worst... The rest who still are working in our hospitals are seriously dedicated and really care... When it comes to privatization on the healthcare in Canada, it was like that back during the 50s, so, with having healthcare privatization return it's gonna be bad, remember that a private healthcare is only a business, not a service, if you got money, they'll do the job, but if you don't have the money, then you're out of luck... I never had to worry about the money I had when I needed medical attention which happened often... And in case of privatization, where do you think they'll get their medical personnel ?? It's only gonna be healthcare for the rich...
@@jaydoe5654 We are paying for him and others like him. We should abolish the "free" healthcare and reduce the absurd amount of taxes on the citizenry.
As a Canadian I can say the people are amazing, the geography is amazing, and I can't say what I think about the government because *Comment removed by Canadian Government/Commentaire supprimé par Government du Canada*
To bad the same doesn't go for the government. They are following the Marxist play book You know bankrupt the country, destroy the middle class. We are more than a trillion in debt. We do not have a healthy economy. Where have you been hiding?
@@fwcolb he could be forever though lmao all this censorship and bill c-10 is gonna turn everyone liberal there isn’t 4 year terms like USA Trudeau could literally be prime minister until he dies and his recent re-election he literally lost to conservative in popular vote by 200 000 people, he only won because of the seats like literally 52% of Canadians votes go unheard
Canada is not perfect and has its own problems like any other country.. but I think it is the only country that everybody agrees to love !! I mean what’s not to love about Canada?! ..Canadians are the most polite and compassionate people I’ve ever seen, I love the people, the streets, the food, the diverse culture, I even love its harsh winters!! I just love Canada ❤️🇨🇦 .. I love it so much that when I travel back to the old country I start missing it within few days of my trip!!
My experience with canadian Healthcare- 3 times I've used it.tore 2 muscles in my knee. It was locked in place they wanted to do surgery. Took 18 months to get a date for the surgery. By than my knee had healed all messed up and I had went back to work. 2nd time I got hit in the head with a hook at work. I sat in the ER bleeding out my head into a puddle of blood knee the floor for 6 hours. Than they called me in and put staples in my head in about 5 minutes. Last timebi used them my son had meningitis. I brought him to the hospital 3 times before they did anything other than give us advil and send us home. By the time they started treating him for meningitis it was so bad he couldn't bend his neck he almost died. I'm sure our Healthcare helps many but there's a lack of accountability and many holes
im canadian and i actually had no idea considering i live in a city with over a million people and it feels like a good half of the people are poverty stricken
@@myHandle8374 our prime minister is 100% not the cause of this lol. He has had great economic policies. We have had a housing issue for the last 20 years. So blaming this on Justin doesn't even make sense. Especially when the entire world is going through a lot of inflation for the war and other causes. Actually when the conservative government was in power was when this started if you want to get into this. It's nice if we could blame one man on our problems. But the reality is it's not. A modern economy is complicated.
Canada is known for having a really stable banking system with strict regulations. Maybe this risk aversion is why we have an entrepreneurial short-fall though. Sorry about that, ey
Canada is heavily in debt, older population, low birth rate, higher devoice rate, and low paying jobs. I am sure this will not bite Canada in the ass in the future/present.
We went through worse, skulay.What will bite us in the ass is the mass migration and the conflicts that will appear as the population will be separated into tribes fighting each other like in the U.S.A.
Yup, most jobs are minimum wage and most jobs are low hours. I know personally many who went to Uni and ended up working a low paying job, simply because they couldn't find a job doing what they went for. It doesn't help any that education is still extremely expensive, which is going to bite our economy in the ass in the near future when more and more jobs are going to be needing advanced skills, not being able to afford those skills is going to push our welfare system to a breaking point.
Exactly. There is no reason for the vast difference in wealth. Canada is blessed so the homelessness, the horrible problems that are happening to a majority of Canadians is not necessary. There is enough for all.
I was working at a bank when they switched over from our paper to plastic bills, I remember the day they brought in the 5's, the whole branch smelled of maple. All the bills have a small hint of a maple smell when brand new. You are more likely to smell it in the 100s because they're passed around the least.
this channel absolutely deserves more subscribers i wish you luck from the bottom of my heart your videos make me a happy business student in highschool
Shout out to Calgary Transit at 0:14. We use to have transit buses going through C-Train lines, but were rerouted a few years ago to make way for the 4 car C-train.
8:32 I think you got that wrong. When America sneezes, Canada catches a cold. Canada is way more dependent on exports to the US than what people think. Canada would be ' dead ' if the US shut down imports from north of the border. Millions of Canadians would find themselves unemployed almost overnight if that were to happen.
Your claims aren't based in reality. If the U.S. shit the northern border Canada would just transfer its economic requirements to China and Europe. The U.S. is incapable of hurting Canada because we have good leverage over them. During the trump administration we threatened tariffs at targeted states that would ruin Trumps chances at reelection. Trump backed off and got rid of multiple tariffs as a result. Canada has unique economic pull against the united states. If Canada shut the border down. 15 states that rely on trade with Canada would completely collapse. Triggering civil war in the U.S. and cause destruction.
Canada is deep in debt, hiding at the sub-national level. Deep, deep, deep in debt. Government debt per person is out of control. In addition to the debt problem, they are failing to capitalize on their incredible resources, due to self-inflicted policy decisions masquerading as environmental and social progressivism but really chosen for blind political gain, at a time where a shortage of those resources is now threatening to leave European allies cold and provoke WW3. Trudeau said to the German ambassador that there "has never been a good business case for LNG export facilities" when that ambassador was visiting to beg for resources. The current generation are priced out of the housing market, inflated for decades by record low interest rates and policy meant to favour an aging population and immigrant capital. The much lauded healthcare system is consistently ranked 2nd last in the OECD for most outcomes, ahead of only the US, and is completely failing rural communities. The lack of ability to establish private consultancies continues to drain the country of top medical talent, who migrate to the US, but would otherwise remain in Canada and expand the capacity of the system for serious procedures (rather than reduce access to existing free services which is highly constrained and could use relief from other options). The education system is too busy worrying about progressive policies to notice their plummeting mathematics results. The economy is sorely lacking in labour, because it's youth have been over-encouraged to pursue University education and they cannot attract foreign labour due to high cost of living, leaving industry unable to take advantage of significant demand in certain areas. And of course, there's the fact that everything Canadian is only possible due to America - economy, military, heck, even pop-culture and "unique" identity are completely reliant on the US (the main crux of Canadian identity being taking pride in "we're not American"). There is a massive reckoning coming for Canada in the next few decades, likely stagnation on par with Japan of the 70s-90s, despite all the immigration. When the global debt crisis finally starts to rear it's ugly head, Canada will be one of the hardest hit, make no mistake.
The $100.00 bill absolutely has a smell to it, and to me it definitely smells of Maple Syrup. However, the older the bill the weaker the scent, and there are people who can not smell anything different about it. The Canadian Mint has also denied that anything is used to make it smell different.
The risk aversion issue is very prominent. It is hard to drive concensus in this country and most companies and government agencies are racing towards second place.
As a canadian I can say that unless you have 2 billion dollars in the bank, u shouldn't move here. A burgur costs 20$ and minimum wage is 15$ at least in B.C
Canadian here, if your wondering about how the 100$ bill smells I can confirm it smells like maple syrup if its a new one that has been recently printed but it'll loose its scent after awhile though. Also I love your video its incredibly interesting to hear about my countries economy into more depth. Great work, keep going and I wish you all the best.
I kept a $100 bill in a small box for a month. After all that time in there when I opened the box all I could smell was maple syrup and I was like "WHO SPILLED MAPLE SYRUP IN MY CASH BOX!!!?" then I realized that's how they come to you. Slathered in maple syrup XD. God bless this ridicules country!
But i think more best country is a S.Korea or Germany. even they countries have no enough nature resource. but Canada already has strategic resources. so I Canadian's success is no surprise.
A coworker told me this once but I refuse to believe it. Maybe the moment you use it at checkout and goes into the drawer it loses its scent. All things considered I would rather have money not smell like anything because its less likely the person getting their change back will like you in the long run. It would be better for business overall. But I wish they would put a drawing of maple syrup on the 100$
Very proud of our Canadian cousins up north. Having approximately 12 percent equivalent of America's population. Canada has a diverse population and organized system of fairness. Canada is very impressive to me and salute them. I haw always said that if I was not a American, then I would rather be Canadian. From US American Air Force Security Police Military Veteran. GOD speed to Canada and all the people.
@@jeanpaulfelix4095 Yes I am aware of the liabilities. He even mentions Canada 's exorbitant household debt in the video. I agree that the title is somewhat inaccurate. But what I'm more impressed about is how he dissected its economic exports, population dynamics, shortcomings, and it's culture.
If Canada is so rich, why do we have 53% of Canadian living from paycheck to paycheck? The statistics were discussed recently on many news channels. There are evictions across the country because people can not pay their rent. We do have a problem with the distribution of wealth.
Check back in fifty years. The best years were behind us and now slipping into " under developed" country status. A third of the population is creating the " taken for granted" wealth. That percenrage is getting smaller and transformation into a nanny state is the current situation.
Canadian here. Not a fan of our high taxes and publicly funded Healthcare. It's a good country if you want to be mediocre. If you have ambition and dreams, better to find another place.
You got it backwards: The saying is: "When the US sneezes, Canada catches a cold". This refers to the fact that in an economic downturn, we get hit harder than the US.
while that may be the saying, it's not necessarily true. For example Canada faired MUCH better than the US during The Great Recession. Not a single bank defaulted in the country, unlike the UK or US
@@patrickbajorek5500 thats because we had a good financial minister at the time who almost completely stopped the problem from manifesting. But now all the regulations have been removed by the Trudeau government, so were back in square one
That's why I keep a close eye on what's happening in the states even though I'm Canadian. Both our countries are intertwined. If anything big/significant happens to them, will definitely affect us
Canada is "rich", but you wouldn't know it if you lived here, also in more recent years trade is beginning to shift more towards China than the USA. I heard an apt description once of the Canadian economy, some guy had said Canada is like the East India of specialized labor and I think it relatively accurate
We just "sell more" to China in the recent years doesn't mean Canada's economy depends on them, however it is what CCP trying to advertise to the Canadians... The relationship between Canada and USA is irreplaceable. Not to mention China economy is in a deep shxt now, decades of lies and hide by the CCP are about to be busted.
Once again, another person that can THINK. Not too many of those in Canada. Don't you love those RUclips videos that claim Canada is the best country in the world. The question is, I wonder in what other countries he has lived in to make a silly statement like that. Of course, if you came from some banana republic as a refugee to Canada, it would be the greatest. By the way, I was born here and I can say that because I am not blind and have travelled the world.
@@mjor6406 Well for starters and if you think it is so easy, can you get me Australian or New Zealand citizenship? I am not so brain dead to think everything is so much better in Canada like many of those really dumb RUclips videos claim. You realize one of them even stated that we produce more maple syrup than anyone else. Wow, what an effing claim to fame. We produce nothing in this country. Everytime I want something, I either have to pay overpriced Canadian pricing due to an extra middleman or slip over to the US and buy it there for a lot less.
The healthcare system is not functioning as intended. A year out from this video we're seeing emergency room closures. Our units have been understaffed for years, and I don't even want to think about the long term care facilities.
Pardon me, but as a Canadian I remember that the emphasis on multiculturalism (in contrast to the American "melting pot" idea) started in the late '60s. It was a way to get english-speaking Canadians to be more accepting of the huge french-speaking population's desire to not have their culture swallowed up. In Toronto there were also festivals celebrating other peoples - such as the Irish or Japanese who form part of our mosaic.
Multiculturalism is stupid, I got Indian friends but they all act Canadian. People need to have the same culture & customs to interoperate with each other.
@@killman369547 You are right! Video is not 100% accurate. I'm bord in Canada and live in Canada.(from Quebec so sorry for my english) I think maybe video "cut round the corner" and go to the "Trudeau image of Canada" and stereotypes. The video does not tell lies but does not tell all. Canada look good from outside but have a lot of problems in the inside.
An immigrant from Europe said that in Canada you have to work for every single penny. for the majority of people, most jobs are grossly undervalued here.
In Canada the price of the average condo unit is about 7x the annual household income. We are not really that wealthy, there are few European countries with a worse ratio than this. People will say we are still rich from a global perspective, but think of how far we have fallen in 2 short generations. In the 60s you could buy a HOUSE for 1.5x the average household income at a time when most women were housewives.
I know it's highly unlikely but could you make a video about Hungary? That place is in a wierd limbo, people either can't tell where it is or they have been there and loved it. As far as I can tell, economy channels tend to avoid hungary due to fishy statistics (Like in russia or belarus)
@@richardnemeth5911 Poland is at a different scale due to population size and geographic location including having a seashore...it is in a easier position to get it developed....
Thank You so much. Your documentaries are really so informative and educative. I feel immense pleasure to gain so much knowledge in a short but very beautifully filmed documentaries. I suggest you must mention date and time of film making so that even if someone watches it years later he could relate the economic progress and calculate for himself the current figures to some extent.
Canada is great, we definitely do rely on the United States and some other countries. I was born in British Columbia and now I’m living in the Yukon, I have to say it is very cold 🥶. As of March we Yukoner’s are experiencing the most snow all year, where as Vancouver where I was born is experiencing bushes blossoming!
Then you haven’t seen how much more multicultural the other parts of the world is. Get out there and check out the world, you’ll be surprised how behind Canada is with everything, including multiculturalism. Oh, if you’re not adventurous enough, you can start with the UK. ;)
The thing said about immigration working harder is not true, as per government stats, 92%of the Syrian immigrants that came into Canada are still on welfare
@@rkt81 this comment needs more thumbs up lol, we should really be increasing the quality of the current Canadians rather than trying to keep on bringing in more people. Eventually, we will reach capacity on earth. Also, because of the high taxes, cost of living and relatively low wages, it becomes very difficult to actually live and not just survive for the lowest earners.
also off question OK if you go to Canada country OK and I buy vehicle over there then went I want to go back to my home country to visit friends and family member what will happen to the vehicle???????????thank you for help sorry for bad english
Living in Canada all my life I must say it is a nice country to live in. I am very lucky in my life so I find that I get to enjoy the best parts of Canada. The people for the most part are very friendly there are lots of immigrants so you get to see lots of different cultures live together. Our gas prices are just skyrocketing which is one thing that is a cause of high taxes.
also off question OK if you go to Canada country OK and I buy vehicle over there then went I want to go back to my home country to visit friends and family member what will happen to the vehicle???????????thank you for help sorry for bad english
Being Born in Canada I can say the baby low rate simple cause we can not afford children. Most work for 12$ an hour at 44 hours a week, on a single income. With only a 900$ income a month, most rents are 700+ and utilities on top of that ( which many do with the basics power/water and only internet) along with cell phones, bonus being TV/home phone ($200 a month extra) and the groceries on top of that. Lets not count the rise in Realty Housing costs. So how can one afford a home mortgage, car insurance and a child on top of all those basics? Canada Homeless is now growing in the eastern coast to show how imbalanced it is. this can be seen More in New Brunswick, where the Elders are higher in population in regions like Miramichi, Rexton and Campbellton etc. Where a lot of the younger generations move to different areas of Canada from NB like Alberta, BC, Ontario. Canada still has a long way to go as issues are rising each passing year for sustainable income. PS no the 100$ does not smell like maple syrup.
Thank you for a very interesting video. We lived several years in Montreal and I think you’ve got it about right. As a European your having to explain (presumably to Americans) that it is not socialist seems hilarious! But you and the comments touch on a very important point for the future that we have to face in Europe as well: what comes after an ageing service economy? In UK we are already desperately overcrowded and don’t really have the luxury of importing young, fit tax-paying immigrants for much longer. Is the future that we all become poor in the developed west and other parts of the world like Asia and eventually Africa supply all our goods and food and become rich? Our prime minister is telling us we can become a high wage and high skill economy but I fear this is a short term effect - why don’t the highly educated Chinese become just as skilled?
The Chinese are already highly educated and skilled as can be witnessed in the electric vehicles they have developed and the other electrical/electronic goods coming out of China now. They have a huge population and see fit to forcibly retrain Uighurs to provide cheap Labour to manufacture the clothes, PPE and all other types of low cost consumer goods they manufacture. We must continue to develop knowledge based industries around our leading universities otherwise our children will face very difficult futures.
Oftentimes, I considered moving to Canada. It is so Beautiful, the areas that I have seen! When I was there last, it was with my ex-wife, before we were married and Niagra Falls was wonderful! I never got a chance to return for my helicopter tour over The Falls! I guess divorce does that to you, eh? The people are friendly too, not like most people, here in Detroit. No that COVID has its hooks in things, I guess I can only see Canada again from Television and Books. I love Canada! As a child, my mother took me there a few times! God, I wish I could go there again!
I would love ❤️ to see B.C., home of The Lions! I have heard that Vancouver is a very beautiful ❤️ place! It would be a treat to see The BC Lions play a game. When my mom was alive, before Dimentia set in, we would watch as many CFL games on TV as we could watch and she would say to me that our Detroit Lions could learn how to catch a football like them.
Don't, it is a shithole now....... I've lived here my entire life and have observed things here since I was young.... The changes are horrendous..... The country is being run into the ground and very quickly becoming a 3rd world nation.
@@flynn4838 a 3rd world nation???? Idk where you lived in Canada or if you’ve actually been to a 3rd world country to make such a comparison but I have traveled to a 3rd world country and there’s no comparison or any similarities to Canada. I have to disagree with you on that point. I’m my opinion Canada is one of the best countries to live in, for many many reasons.
No the recently minted ones definitely do. The little maple leaf transparent dot on the left side of of the bill- if you scratch it it does smell like a hint of maple syrup. If you get the 100s that have been circulating around Toronto’s financial district they’re more likely to smell like blow though
I’ve been in Canada over 30 years now, and I’ll say that it is a good country with lots of potential yet yo be fully utilized in terms of economy and culture. Canada has humans from all over the world and this can be there asset for economic growth with advancing the economy from manufacturing to AI, Research and Development and of course - the construction industry. Much of Canada still needs developing in terms of cities to inhabit.
Not every country wants to be overpopulated like India and China. A Canada with 1.4 billion people rather than 40 million would be a polluted mess. I bet 1950 India with 300 million people was a prettier place to live than 2022 1.5 billion India.
In Canada, it's called a microwave oven. In Australia, it's called a zapperwhacker.
i will give it to them, Canada take the L on this one
canada is a service based country. and that is a wealthy country? a service based economy is a declining one.
we call it a nuker
In Canada you can microwave it, mic it, nuke it, zap it, or irradiate it. I don't think I've heard anything else used.
I can't say I've ever heard it called a microwave oven here, usually just a microwave or "mic", also using the term "nuke" as a verb
We're over taxed. Housing prices are through the rough and we manufacture nothing. We sell our natural resources and buy them back at a higher price. Yah just great.
Couldn't have said it any better lmao
Well...the natural resources we can get to market. We can't even get our own oil from Alberta to any domestic refineries. I doubt a new pipeline will ever get built.
You mean thorough the roof?! 😂
@@julyman9 that's all you got from that?
@@dusanstanko9881 all I got from that is that you can’t write for shit and need to go back to school son
Coming from a developing country myself and migrating to Canada, I could see the big difference a developed country like Canada runs its system more efficiently. Yeah taxes are high here but you could clearly see the difference in terms of how the government serves its people through social services and infrastructure.
Haha I know your from hopeless Philippines, where self-serving politicians are more atuned to elitism and privilege. Economic developments we have here are only urban sprawls and nothing else. No real social or structural improvements. A city is said to be doing good simply because it now has bigger population, period!
@@mountainous_port I really feel like the Internet is filled with filipinos complaining about their country. Well, at least you do have internet.
@@mountainous_port Lol. Most first world comment I've ever seen
You forgot to say sorry
@@mountainous_port accurate
"Bringing more immigrants is more of an economic decision than a moral one. " - Agree
When it comes to sociopolitical decisions, always follow the money.
@@tomasandrew9354 well stated.
It’s doesn’t benefit the economy the elite just want more votes
We need immigrants. I want a half mixed kid. Stronger immune system
But legal immigrants. Illegal immigrants should be deported after a first hearing by a judge.
As an American living in Canada (Québec), je suis heureux d'être ici (I'm happy to be here). 🇨🇦🇺🇸
Thank you Canada for being so welcoming to immigrants. Its my 6th year now and I came here as a student when I was 18. I have lived in all three major cities in Canada, I started in Toronto and spent 4 years in Montreal studying French, 6 months in PEI and ended up living in Vancouver). I'm a motocycle enthusiast and I visited so many incredible places like from west Windsor/Detroit US border to the east where you can see the most spectacular water dam in Quebec Canada. I drove my car across Canada this summer. (Quebec Ontario Manitoba Saskatchewan Alberta and finally the beautiful British Columbia) Thank you again for such an amazing life experience. It's been a great honor.❤
Awesome man!!!! 🇨🇦
Awesome story! Where are you from? I'm currently an international student myself in Toronto
I hope u like beautiful BC tho hope u like rain especially in the lower mainland
We've got enough of your kind here. Time to return home, bud.
Welcome to raincouver! where instead of snow you get rain (Fun fact: we had a Tornado watch issued today as of this posting)
Slight correction from a Canadian, at 8:30 you said “when the American economy catches a cold, Canada sneezes”, the saying is actually the other way around. We say “when America sneezes, Canada catches a cold”. Oh, and sorry for bringing it up eh.
Right you are. Also heard "when America catches a cold, Canada gets pneumonia."
and when China coughs... ( lol too soon?)
@@spliffington2394 is this a COVID joke or a economics joke, ether way it funny
Wrong. In 2008 America caught the flu and went rock bottom. Canada's economy was fine. It took a dip just like most of the world did but it escaped the great recession.
@@TonyMontanaDS Your right and wrong. The crash of 2008 caused the Canadian stock market to closely mirror that of the U.S.A. Portfolios and pensions were devastated for many, including myself. Fortunately, due to a very different banking system and mortgage qualification criteria, the Canadian housing market was protected and far less interrupted. 2008 was a rare instance where Canada just got a cold and the U.S.A got pneumonia.
I am a Chinese international student, i have been studying in Canada for 7 years.
Compared with the United States, Canadian society is more tolerant of immigrants, there is less racial discrimination, and people are very friendly and kind.
Love Canada from China, I really miss the time when I lived in Canada.
We dont love you as much when you take our people hostages (the two Michaels)
@@pololedodo7981 Jesus Christ, bud. Take her down a few hundred notches there.
Well in the 90s, Richmond was avoided and the main road was known as the Ho Chi Minh Trail, do to new drivers and the need to avoid the booby traps, that has changed and those comments are never heard anymore.
@@pololedodo7981 so you are blaming him? You're a joke 😒
@@pololedodo7981 what does she have to do with what her government does ? Should we be blaming you for Canada’s many residential school massacre’s too?
This is the first time outside of Canadian political economy books that I've seen someone mention the staples thesis and its impact on Canada's economy, politics, and civil society. I don't think most Canadians have ever even heard of (arguably) the most significant guiding idea in this country!
Learned innisian theory in my university course. Super surprised to hear it again.
Canada wouldn't have such a slow population growth is a tiny small house wasn't around 2 million dollars. If you can't even afford to survive why would you want to bring a life into this world so they can suffer. Canada needs to have better wage regulations to keep the middle class going. I also say this as someone that makes nearly 3 times the average wage and still can't afford a house.
I wanna come to Canada but this really scares me man
Regular people are already priced out of Toronto and Vancouver
All Thanks to the unregulated spending by our prime minister trudeau and equally weak and incompetent opposition , ive always voted liberal since i came to this country but not anymore unless they change their policies and do something about housing prices , hate "CONS" so the only option left for people like me is N.D.P 🤷🏻♂️
Sadly, this isn't exclusive to Canada, even in poorer countries young people struggle to buy affordable houses in their own countries.
Honestly I'd look at the USA if I were you. A house here in Canada on average will cost you double what you would pay in the US. And the wages a much lower too. Canada is just an expensive resort place to spend some vacation in. Definitely not live here imo. Saying this as a Canadian.
Canada's economy is bolstered on mortgage debt. The country may be rich but the citizens are not. Citizens are house poor.
Couldn’t have said it better myself
The youth of Canada are screwed. They either have a massive mortgage (financed by their parents), or pay exorbitant rent which consumes their income. Either way, there are no savings for retirement. The country is so screwed for the future.
It's not that bad.
If you can avoid living around Vancouver or Toronto you should be fine.
I just bought my first house, 30 minutes for the second largest city (2014, 4 bedroom, 13sqf ward, garage and everything), and I won't be crumbling under the mortgage.
If you have a good skill job or if you studied in a meaningful/useful field you should be fine.
I am wondering where is this great country that he is talking about . I live in totally different Canada.
im canadian and i totally agree
Live in Canada... Dad had to have his thyroid removed, go on meds then have a diseased heart-valve removed all within 6 months... cost him nothing except the TV we kept buying for him ($30 a day is a lot man...) while he recovered in hospital. Brother had a completely shattered ankle, needed several specialists to piece it back together, 20 steel rods, 6 months of pain and agony and it cost $400 for some nice comfy crutches. If for nothing else, I love this country for that. I, thankfully, have not needed it's help nearly as much but I am infinitely grateful that if something happens, it will not be the financial ruin of me, regardless of my income.
What shocked me is how much it costs for those _not_ covered by our healthcare system.
I had a roommate who was an international student who's health insurance hadn't kicked in yet. He slipped on an apple and broke his ankle. He had a bunch of X-Rays done, had a cast made, and got a set of crutches. Including the ER visit in the middle of the night, the cost to him was... $1,500. The crutches were only $40.
I'm very curious to know how much a similar visit would have cost in the US...
@@romeomontana238 I have never had any major health issues but if I do... glad to be in Canada, are you implying you would rather be in the US, pay taxes *and* hope your work has good insurance or get your own?
@@romeomontana238 I... Reverse engineered your taxes and if you are paying $3200 in Federal taxes.. you are making around 180k a year.. Otherwise if you are paying a combined $3200 in federal and provincial taxes you are earning about $125k a year. So.... you have my sympathies? All this is pending you live in Ontario of course.
@@romeomontana238 yeah... I'm not 100% sure you know how much taxes you pay.
@@romeomontana238 how conceited do you have to be to make a good story about people getting medical help, not having to go bankrupt because of a decent medical system and then make it about you? And more specifically a complaint about how much taxes you have to pay. Please, find another country, Canada doesn't need your type.
For the healthcare in Canada; I never really needed to go the hospital my whole life. Then one time 3-4 years ago I needed a massive surgery that would have put me back 250k canadian. I know because it was literally written on the walls of the hospital how much the fees would be if I did not have my health card. All to say, maybe Canadian health care is not the best but, it sure as hell saved my life and my wallet. For that i’m eternally grateful. Go Canada!🎉🇨🇦
Okay I got a free surgery from being hit be a car and the retards used a massive screw for my ankle...okay like a third the size of that and the surgery was only 1200
@@adaptercrash many health care professionals in the whole system and some better than others that’s for sure. Sorry to hear your surgery didn’t go as well as it could have.
@@alexyoung2104 they bad man my stepsister had a terrible surgery I been to school and their pre med bachelor is a joke compared to mine they ain't academic I've had one good experience with a stomach infection where they actually did a good job but man you still pay for the anti biotic and know you need them its just a testing process to get prescription that's if you can get past triage honestly I had to go to Walmart clinic for that and the hospital just didn't care I can't even follow up on being ran over go to the clinic it's all retards with kids who will be fine in a few days i as sick all the time as a kid and went there twice cause of bacterial inflammation and pink eye
As an international student in Canada, I agree. Studying here in Canada is not cheap, and it comes with lots of restrictions and penalties, but unlike the USA, there's a pathway towards residency after graduation which makes all the investment and hassle of studying abroad worth it.
Studying in Canada is cheap for people who have Canadian nationality. I'm a french Quebecer and university cost like 10 to 20 times less than in the US because government just pay for it.
There is a pathway to citizenship through a student visa in the US. Not true
@@noahremnek3615 there is but it often takes 10-15 or more years bruh
Residency is that magic word. It makes everything look beautiful. While in reality, its too late once you realize it
@benimar thats a poor country third world country mindset
11:59 Tourism struggles for a a few reasons, but one reason that is seldom mentioned is the vast distances. People who come as tourists do not have time to travel to more than one or two interesting destinations. The travel time to go to many sites is prohibitive. This is exacerbated by the great lack of mass transit outside of large urban areas. No high speed continental trains for instance.
High speed trains like in Japan or Europe would be pointless in Canada. The tourism season is too short and the consumer base is too small. It will be extremely expensive to build and maintain such a system anyway.
@@timedone8502 Good point. I had not thought of it that way.
If they gave you lemon, make lemonade! People should come and visit one city or region at a time, then come back again …..develop some travel products or concept that attract visitors to come back a second time, just like Europe! Sell the region, not the country.
The U.S. is a much better tourist deal with way more choices and better weather… There is no competition here.
Nobody is going to pay thousands of dollars and travel thousands of miles to freeze their asses off
As a Canadian who thinks we have a long way to go if we want to live up to being everyone's favorite country... it's really weird seeing people praise us for doing the bare minimum 😅If we're the nice country, it sometimes scares me to think of what it's really like elsewhere. I keep up with international affairs, but haven't ever actually left Canada, and I really feel like we don't live up to all of our positive stereotypes. We do all live in igloos though!
I agree, it is weird. But canada is a country that celebrates mediocracy.
I 100% agree, with how much oil, lumber and other natural resources combined with how many immigrants are coming here I would think we should have a lot more money. In Vancouver the cost of living is so high it really doesn't matter if you make 100k a year if it costs 100k a year to live.
I think a lot of our problems are how much we discount the US. Vancouver is one of the largest places to film in NA, for a little bit during Covid is was the most filmed place in NA. The reason is Canada gives the film studios a lot of tax breaks to film around here. The question is why are Americans getting huge tax breaks instead of the US? Not to mention so many other resources we cheaply share with the US.
It really comes down to Canada has no ambition to either sell what we have for better cost, or come up with something that is worth a higher cost that would boost the economy.
@@ML-ov7wo
How do you figure we celebrate mediocrity?
We're the best. (Haha.)
One of the reason is that you haven't experienced the worse countries. In my home country, any bigger disease / visiting to ICU could make your whole family be bankrupt; You would pay similar tax rates, but get nothing from government; You may be bullied by local wealthy people but no way to protect your family; You may be not able to study in University since someone hijack your accepting letter; You are not allowed to use RUclips/Google... Too many to list. Overall, no country is 100% excellent, but Canada is close to the excellent one.
I find Europeans and East Asians to be much kinder than Canadians from personal experience as a Canadian who enjoys travelling. Canadians keep to themselves in cliques where they feel safe surrounded by friends, while the other groups I mentioned are welcoming and curious with foreigners. I think the narrative of Canada as the fav country is based on outdated stereotypes from folks like Bob and Doug Mackenzie. The only difference between a Canadian and American is the American will actually say what they're thinking.
Excellent video! I'm an American biz owner in Washington state that has been trying to partner up with Canadian firms to do business in the US, but it sure isn't easy. I completely agree that the Canadian govt needs to focus on entrepreneurship.
I'm an international student in Hamilton, Ontario and can validate that I love this place and i hope I can make this amazing country with amazing people my home permanently!
You love hamilton? what is so loving about it?
Would you consider yourself a canadian after a few more years living here?
@@OK-ws7ti oh yes I’m still a temporary resident but really happy and proud about how Canada is, would love to be a fellow countryman
And you live in hamilton? wow. those are some serious rose tinted glasses
@@ML-ov7wo everything is rose tinted in Canada for me coming from a country much much underdeveloped from Canada
"Canada needs to invest in its people - not by showering more social benefits over them, but by promoting a culture of entrepreneurial mindsets and innovation." Speaking as a born and bred Canadian, we don't suffer from a lack of entrepreneurial spirit. What's happening is that we don't have enough discretionary income, therefore, we're risk-averse. Cost of living has increased faster than wages, especially when it comes to housing, both home ownership and rent. Living in areas that well away from Toronto/Vancouver does create more discretionary income, but prices are increasing everywhere at this point.
So long as you're being frugal, you can still save a fair amount, yet saving is undeniably a slower process these days when over half of your annual salary goes to basic needs. Considering the first bulk of savings goes to emergency funds and a future down payments, saving up for anything else happens later in life.
Great point. Big enough discretionary income does not necessarily encourage entrepreneurship. I think it is more of a cultural and a mind set thing. I think the government needs to do more in terms of incentives and programs to encourage and support innovative ventures that will grow the economy. But then again, with good social and health benefits, why would her citizens move a muscle. It is not just peculiar to Canada, it it a human tendency.
Risk averse can be a good thing. USA always reaching for the moon, even if Artemis does the national anthem.
This is something I completely agree on an have argued in the past, but I think you have said it better. There are a lot of resources that I think we could make more on, but discount to the states for very cheap, which is somewhat okay because we rely off them as much as or more than they rely off us. However one thing we don't have that the US does is that ambition to just make money and drive an economy. Most people here don't care about being Mark Cuban or whatever rich person from the US, they just want to work a decent salary and take care of their family.
There's nothing wrong with taking care of your family, but if we encouraged ambition more, or just had more of it I think we could have such a great economy.
Personally one thing I would do is lower the funding we give to welfare and decrease the cost of schooling for Canadians. Welfare in some cases will pay for school, but if you aren't on welfare your stuck racking up debt which to me seems unfair and imbalanced. Why does someone who gets part of their rent paid and monthly subsidies get school subsidized while other low income people are left to get a loan and be in debt after school. Welfare is a horrible system in it's current state anyways. It's short term help, every month people need another check to survive off welfare.
Investing in cheaper schooling is long term help. After graduating you can get a job and aren't dependent on the government. Public colleges aren't too bad, but big Universities and private schools are still very daunting and could use some work. Even just creating a system where no scholarship gets left unrewarded would really help, since so many scholarships never even get used.
Yeah that last part seemed very ideological to me too. We have plenty of entrepreneurs, believe me.
What we instead need is to get our cost of living under control. You want to encourage entrepreneurship and more effective investment? Let's try to make it cheaper to actually live in the major cities!
However, that sort of issue can only be solved by diligent nationwide urban planning. For example, we need to encourage people to move more to cities outside just Toronto, Montreal and Vancouver. Provinces and feds should do more to make these other cities just as big and fun. If the population is more spread out, you'll see costs naturally become more reasonable.
Couldn't have put it better myself, that final word segment left me with the exact same sentiment. If people are learning from this video, this comment has to be at the top.
I was not expecting much, so was pleasantly surprised, that was not a bad summary at all. Keep up the great work.
Thank you 🙏
Has been living 5 years in Vancouver, now planning to move to the US due to high prices for living. Simple house costs around 1.5M $ which makes it impossible to buy for single household with the income of 100k.
if you move outside Vancover into a smaller city you can find decent prices. Downtown will always be overpriced.
If you want cheap living costs, then you're gonna have to move to the prairies. It's way cheaper especially with less tax in Alberta
Go to Montreal!
come on up to the interior... kamloops and kelowna are expensive but you can buy a decent house in the smaller towns for around 200k
Yeah medical bills and education is gonna be wayyyyyyyy more expensive in USA. Good luck bud
I’ve been an International student here for 2 years and working here for 1 year now. Undoubtedly it’s the best country on this planet. Warm welcoming people, amazing places to visit and most importantly respectful in every terms. Canada you have my heart ❤️ God bless Canada 🇨🇦
Definitely when you have migrated population and even less population, Humans will be polite and less stressed
indian guy?
@@lsudo racist
@@Ashhhh688 which university did u go to and what do u do?
@@Ashhhh688 how is that Racist???
"Having a good welfare system does not make a country Socialist".
That's a (very) simple point many Americans (USA) have a hard time wrapping their mind around.
*Republican Americans. Everyone else understands
Good reply. Americans can seldom wrap their "minds" around anything which isn't home grown. Pity, they used to lead the world with progresssive ideas from which we all benefitted. Now it's neo-fascist shambles, similar to many African dictatorships. So what if a country chooses socialst programs anyway? Does the sky fall? What childishness!
they have a hard time wrapping there minds around alot of things.
@@robertscott537 I disagree with that comment to some degree. The US under Biden is leading the world with a Global tax rate against huge corporations to end or limit tax havens. So there are still some progressive ideas. I would also argue that social programs are quite popular here and have much support. For example, the latest American Families Plan that is said to be passed with the infrastructure bill has majority public support. It is said to be the largest expansion in the US social safety net in 50 years. I think the only people who are against social programs are the republicans. They are the ones to quickly label things as socialist or communist. Why listen to them, when they are not even in power?
@@chrisb9996 The largest expansion of the social safety net just in time for Biden to grant amnesty and citizenship to all the illegals in the US before the next election, all but guaranteeing they vote Democrat? Talk about buying votes with other peoples money
Great video. Canadian here. You got almost everything correct. Best I have ever seen with an internet video. Great part with diversification. Got me thinking. We sure do love to protect our favourite companies. Something to think about.
Thank you for watching 🙏
also off question OK if you go to Canada country OK and I buy vehicle over there then went I want to go back to my home country to visit friends and family member what will happen to the vehicle???????????thank you for help sorry for bad english
As a farmer in anada, I would like to say that climate change, has in my lifetime alone, shown to help us but long term will screw everyone. We plant corn with a 20% yield compared to what was being planted here 20 years ago. Heck, 25 years ago Soybeans in our area we're unheard of but are grown plentiful here.
More info on this please?!
You're a farmer? really? And you're crying about climate change? 🤦♂
@@ML-ov7wo why not? It is official that climate change will also affect food production, particularly in the tropical areas.
I haven't sniffed a 100 dollar bill in a while, but I remember when we first minted our new polymer bills they definitely did have a sweet maple aroma. Though I don't find any of the smaller denominations share the same sweet sent as the $100 do.
Yes an if you get a fresh bill from the bank you'll feel good
So you haven’t sniffed $100 bill eh? Good for you ! Have you ever sniffed a hockey player’s underwear? Do you know what a igloo full of unwashed Inuit smell like after they have been in there for eight months?
Make some more bullshit up!
@@Hezzey
Ahh you got me! I sniff fat stacks of those sweet maply $100 bills at least twice a day, once while riding my moose to work at Tim Hortons and also when I'm rubbing one out to that picture of Justin Trudeau hanging on my wall, I cant believe you saw through my deceitful lies 😂
20$ is the best one 🤔
@@anaa9245 don't you just love the smell of Canadian money❤❤❤
Being born as a Canadian and living here my whole life, ive hardly ever heard someone say “eh”
it's more an eastern canadian thing eh
@@The_Bear21 born, raised and still living in eastern canada (which would be 44 years 😁), i've never heard anyone say "eh" ... lol! i have no idea where it comes from ... i remember little sketches that rick moranis and another comedian used to do in the 80s or 90s, a sort of parody comedy bit, and they were constantly saying "eh" with a very exaggerated accent, which sort of stuck, and the characters they were portraying were from edmonton - i don't even think albertans talk like that (i wouldn't know, i've never been), but i honestly think it's a totally stereotypical thing about canada that's just made up 😅
@@nicoleraymonde my family is mostly from Newfieland so I hear the Eh/Aye alot lol
@@nicoleraymonde “take off eh, you hoser.” Bob and Doug McKenzie
I heard it in British Columbia and I'm American
I have lived in Canada since 1972. This is an extremely accurate summary of the Canadian condition. I agree completely with your constructive suggestions for improving that condition.
Canada 🇨🇦; by far my most favorite country in the world 🌎. I literally fell in love with this country back in my high school days in the early 90s; eversince, Canada got stuck in my mind for many years now. The more I see stories about Canada, the more I just want to go to Canada 🇨🇦😫. I have stacks of books 📚 about Canada; travel, economy and politics that I have been reading for many years. I love Canada! 🇨🇦♥
C'mon over. You will be welcome with open arms.
Immigrants are more welcome by our dictator PM than Canadians who were born and raised here.
Read pierre burtons books on of the most prolific canadian authors
You should come back!
Yeah going through highschool during the early 90s is basically heaven. My prom and graduation got canceled lmao
Another thing that should have been mentioned in the segment "Canada is an Energy Superpower" is that we are also a major producer electricity. Per capita, we're some of the biggest producers and consumers of energy. A very large portion of primary aluminum transformation on the north American continent happens in Quebec because of just how cheap and readily available electricity is. Just as there are oil pipelines to the US, there are also a number of electrical interconnections. We've still got massive untapped electrical generation potential. Given the right conditions, we could be a major partner in decarbonising the US. This is something that provincial governments are rather keen on.
We pay the usa to take some of our power when we overproduce and storage is full.
We need better leaders to make us our own rich country rather than piggy back the us
@@aboudhh I don't think you really understand how the power grid actually works. There are many reasons why most interconnections are between Canada and the US.
#1 Distances are shorter between Canadian and US cities than between Canadian cities. There is quite literally 1500 kms of nothing in northern Ontario. It is much easier to connect to the US grid.
#2 Our grid are perfect negatives of each other. The US need more power during summer, and we need more power during winter. While we mostly export power, we actually import a small quantity during the coldest days of the year.
#3 We actually make a lot of money selling electricity. We're talking billions per year. On a provincial budget, that makes a big difference.
I came to Canada from China; When I was child, I don't enough food; I had to walk almost 5 hours to high school one way trip, and brought pickles to school because couldn't afford meals. Now in Canada I have a 3000 ft^2 house and investment properties. So grateful for everything I have.
Why making up stories like they are real lol
@@wconlinewcwc What makes you think that? Do you stalk this man?
Do you actually do anything positive for the community or just TAKE TAKE TAKE from them like the vast majority of other successful people in Canada? All I hear is the typical "Grew up or moved here back in the good o'l days made a bunch of money bought a bunch of AFFORDABLE rental property and now Instead of doing anything positive for for my community I simply charge them twice as much for rent....Genius!" And now you all see why young people are in the situation we are in... Greedy scumbags
K D All good questions. Founder of Barrick, the biggest gold producer in the world, he starved at home country and shocked at how much food on table after came to Canada when he was a child. He worked very hard all his life and donated a lot of his fortunes to charity. Good role model.
pickles are good
I appreciate you mentioning the price of goods varying throughout the country. As someone who lives in Toronto, a cone of ice cream can cost $8 CAD, while in Halifax it can be $4 dollars. Great point to touch on.
Yeah so?? And the the price of rice is cheaper in China...what do you expect??
Being a "service economy" just means that you exploit cheap foreign labour to produce for you. Somebody has to produce the goods you use.
Cheap labor isn't necessary exploitive labor especially when the difference is via exchange rates.
@@bevvy.bee9 Why do you think western manufacturing moved over seas? It's because companies could get away with paying Chinese and Indian workers less then American workers. This is true regardless of which currency you use.
@@GreenGiant400 yeah but that's what happens when wages increase, they move manufacturing oversees where wages are low. People in developed nations then move to service based industries that usually require you to be educated
@@bevvy.bee9 Average wages haven't increased since the 70s (accounting for inflation). Jobs left not because of increased wages but because of an increasingly globalized market which has fewer restrictions on it, as well as the industrial development of countries like China. It's an arrangement that has worked out well for the west since they can take advantage of hyper exploited labour to make cheap products without fear of the political backlash that would come from your own population if they were that exploited.
If the West would take back the entirety of its industries the 2nd and 3rd world would go into crisis as well as countries like South Korea.The devellopment that happened in Asia and Africa is mainly due to trade with the West.
Thanks. Great video. High cost of living means often both parents work and spend longer time in education to earn more. This combined with high child care costs solves the mistery of low birth rates. Even with socialised health care and education, parents in many regions simply can't afford to feed and house big families.
To add having an older work force that doesn't retire means younger adults that go into any field get stuck at lower wages because theres no upward momentum in any job. Most people max out their wage at 3-5 years at a company and are stuck till someone retires. Making the income for a young adult house hold less, making it harder to buy a house have a family ect. that older generations already have and just sitting back on what they make. Every job I've had or friends in the last 12 years, upper positions are people from 40-65 and anyone working there from 20-30 are stuck and usually end up leaving. Young adults don't like working at a place where it seems they will have to work there for the next 25 years just to get into a position of upper management. Thats a mortgage length of time that they wont even be able to afford a mortgage.
All part of the plan
BECAUSE OUR CENTRAL GOVERNMENT IS BRAIN DEAD.
interesting overview of Canada's Economy. Wondering if you will do another video about the future of Canada's Economy in this rapidly changing world where the balance of power is shifting and perhaps our neighbour to the south is losing it's position as Top Dog.
And what's that supposed to mean? The USA can't lose its top spot for another 20-30 years or so. What makes you think that will change Canada?
@@uchennanwogu2142 Lets shorten that to 5-10 years :)
@@uchennanwogu2142 Just wait. China will slime its way in there
We're already starting to see the effects of this. Canada is increasingly moving towards multipolar trade deals, whether it be with Pacific countries through the PRFTA or with Atlantic entities like the EU and UK through EUFTA and CANZUK. I think the big Cheetoh really drove home to the federal government how much our country is vulnerable to American strong-arming when he used tariffs and trade shutdowns to force through USMCA and shredded NAFTA.
@@uchennanwogu2142 As the U.S. loses power. Canada takes its economic interests elsewhere. IE international trade deals and businesses of non American origin.
It's a natural thing that has happened countless times before to many countries through out history. Canada will take its investment and trade elsewhere to ensure continued economic growth.
From personal experience in the Canadian healthcare system currently living in Quebec....
Sure, the Canadian healthcare system ain't perfect, but at least it's there when you need a doctor fast, I was rushed to a nearby hospital for emergency surgery fast, spent a few hours in the ER but was quickly moved to the ICU, I almost kicked the bucket, but got operated fast, as soon as I regained conscieness ( sorry for the spelling ) I was ok and made it and soon recovered, after a few weeks on a hospital bed, I was sent back home, took some time but I made it...
If it had been in the US or a privatized place then I was a gonner for sure, or just ended up living in the streets and end up broke with only the clothes I'd still wearing, nothing else...
Trust me, the healthcare system in Canada saved my life many times, it's not perfect and needs a lot of more people now as the personal there are working in impossible conditions nowadays, especially in the ER and the ICU and the Pandemics really didn't helped at all, all it did was making the working condition a lot worst...
The rest who still are working in our hospitals are seriously dedicated and really care...
When it comes to privatization on the healthcare in Canada, it was like that back during the 50s, so, with having healthcare privatization return it's gonna be bad, remember that a private healthcare is only a business, not a service, if you got money, they'll do the job, but if you don't have the money, then you're out of luck...
I never had to worry about the money I had when I needed medical attention which happened often...
And in case of privatization, where do you think they'll get their medical personnel ?? It's only gonna be healthcare for the rich...
$8,563 per Canadian in 2022.
EVERY YEAR YOU PAY FOR "FREE HEALTHCARE".
If you don't use it do you get your money back???? no.
Do that math....
And for how many years BEFORE COVID have the hospitals been complaining about not enough beds????
Health Canada failed in 2020.
@@jaydoe5654 We are paying for him and others like him. We should abolish the "free" healthcare and reduce the absurd amount of taxes on the citizenry.
As a Canadian I can say the people are amazing, the geography is amazing, and I can't say what I think about the government because *Comment removed by Canadian Government/Commentaire supprimé par Government du Canada*
It’s worth mention the banking system that is solid and stable to properly service the public and businesses
How to get mortgages?
To bad the same doesn't go for the government. They are following the Marxist play book
You know bankrupt the country, destroy the middle class. We are more than a trillion in debt. We do not have a healthy economy. Where have you been hiding?
@@keithharley9729 Is the USA much different?
@@keithharley9729 Trudeau will not be PM forever. Without a doubt the most clueless PM in Canadian history, but not the worst.
@@fwcolb he could be forever though lmao all this censorship and bill c-10 is gonna turn everyone liberal there isn’t 4 year terms like USA Trudeau could literally be prime minister until he dies and his recent re-election he literally lost to conservative in popular vote by 200 000 people, he only won because of the seats like literally 52% of Canadians votes go unheard
Canada is not perfect and has its own problems like any other country.. but I think it is the only country that everybody agrees to love !! I mean what’s not to love about Canada?! ..Canadians are the most polite and compassionate people I’ve ever seen, I love the people, the streets, the food, the diverse culture, I even love its harsh winters!! I just love Canada ❤️🇨🇦 .. I love it so much that when I travel back to the old country I start missing it within few days of my trip!!
I feel like I want to live in the BC province
What's NOT to love?? How about Justin Trudeau for starters??
@@MrLEO1353 I know but that will be taken care of next elections for sure .. that narcissist prick has to go
My experience with canadian Healthcare- 3 times I've used it.tore 2 muscles in my knee. It was locked in place they wanted to do surgery. Took 18 months to get a date for the surgery. By than my knee had healed all messed up and I had went back to work. 2nd time I got hit in the head with a hook at work. I sat in the ER bleeding out my head into a puddle of blood knee the floor for 6 hours. Than they called me in and put staples in my head in about 5 minutes. Last timebi used them my son had meningitis. I brought him to the hospital 3 times before they did anything other than give us advil and send us home. By the time they started treating him for meningitis it was so bad he couldn't bend his neck he almost died. I'm sure our Healthcare helps many but there's a lack of accountability and many holes
Now to save the system money they suggest that it might be better to just let them suicide you.
im canadian and i actually had no idea considering i live in a city with over a million people and it feels like a good half of the people are poverty stricken
Justinflation
@@myHandle8374 our prime minister is 100% not the cause of this lol. He has had great economic policies.
We have had a housing issue for the last 20 years. So blaming this on Justin doesn't even make sense. Especially when the entire world is going through a lot of inflation for the war and other causes. Actually when the conservative government was in power was when this started if you want to get into this.
It's nice if we could blame one man on our problems. But the reality is it's not. A modern economy is complicated.
everyone is poverty striken, the rich ones just manage their debt much better.
Canada is known for having a really stable banking system with strict regulations.
Maybe this risk aversion is why we have an entrepreneurial short-fall though.
Sorry about that, ey
The entrepreneurial shortfall is a result of the real estate industry dominating the GDP. Canada's economy is propped up on mortgage debt.
good welfare is why canadians are not entrepreneurial. Innovative countries like US and China have poor welfare system..
@@resonate9815 you know there are very cheap housing for welfare people?
that checks out, but you’ll never hear a canadian say ‘ey’ but rather ‘eh’
@@resonate9815 my god this is the dumbest this ive ever heard....
Canada is heavily in debt, older population, low birth rate, higher devoice rate, and low paying jobs. I am sure this will not bite Canada in the ass in the future/present.
Its less in debt than USA... Let that sink in for a moment.
I already want to leave this country but, everything else is going down the same route.
@@jeromemartel3916 yeah but the USA has a economy way larger than Canada
We went through worse, skulay.What will bite us in the ass is the mass migration and the conflicts that will appear as the population will be separated into tribes fighting each other like in the U.S.A.
Yup, most jobs are minimum wage and most jobs are low hours. I know personally many who went to Uni and ended up working a low paying job, simply because they couldn't find a job doing what they went for. It doesn't help any that education is still extremely expensive, which is going to bite our economy in the ass in the near future when more and more jobs are going to be needing advanced skills, not being able to afford those skills is going to push our welfare system to a breaking point.
One of the most resource rich nations, though very poor management - from a Canadian
Exactly. There is no reason for the vast difference in wealth. Canada is blessed so the homelessness, the horrible problems that are happening to a majority of Canadians is not necessary. There is enough for all.
I was working at a bank when they switched over from our paper to plastic bills, I remember the day they brought in the 5's, the whole branch smelled of maple. All the bills have a small hint of a maple smell when brand new. You are more likely to smell it in the 100s because they're passed around the least.
this channel absolutely deserves more subscribers i wish you luck from the bottom of my heart your videos make me a happy business student in highschool
Thank you for the support 🙏
Canada like a government is so rich,but 90% of population renting houses and living paycheck to paycheck
SHORT STORY
I’m so proud to be a Canadian 🇨🇦♥️🇨🇦
This must be a chat bot 🤖
Shout out to Calgary Transit at 0:14. We use to have transit buses going through C-Train lines, but were rerouted a few years ago to make way for the 4 car C-train.
YYC baby!!
Canada tries to maintain an image of wealth, but truth is, we have way more debt than money.
Our debt appears high because of mortgages, which is probably the most forgivable type of debt one can take on.
This is absolute truth.
8:32 I think you got that wrong. When America sneezes, Canada catches a cold. Canada is way more dependent on exports to the US than what people think. Canada would be ' dead ' if the US shut down imports from north of the border. Millions of Canadians would find themselves unemployed almost overnight if that were to happen.
Your claims aren't based in reality. If the U.S. shit the northern border Canada would just transfer its economic requirements to China and Europe. The U.S. is incapable of hurting Canada because we have good leverage over them.
During the trump administration we threatened tariffs at targeted states that would ruin Trumps chances at reelection. Trump backed off and got rid of multiple tariffs as a result.
Canada has unique economic pull against the united states. If Canada shut the border down. 15 states that rely on trade with Canada would completely collapse. Triggering civil war in the U.S. and cause destruction.
Canada is deep in debt, hiding at the sub-national level. Deep, deep, deep in debt. Government debt per person is out of control. In addition to the debt problem, they are failing to capitalize on their incredible resources, due to self-inflicted policy decisions masquerading as environmental and social progressivism but really chosen for blind political gain, at a time where a shortage of those resources is now threatening to leave European allies cold and provoke WW3. Trudeau said to the German ambassador that there "has never been a good business case for LNG export facilities" when that ambassador was visiting to beg for resources. The current generation are priced out of the housing market, inflated for decades by record low interest rates and policy meant to favour an aging population and immigrant capital. The much lauded healthcare system is consistently ranked 2nd last in the OECD for most outcomes, ahead of only the US, and is completely failing rural communities. The lack of ability to establish private consultancies continues to drain the country of top medical talent, who migrate to the US, but would otherwise remain in Canada and expand the capacity of the system for serious procedures (rather than reduce access to existing free services which is highly constrained and could use relief from other options). The education system is too busy worrying about progressive policies to notice their plummeting mathematics results. The economy is sorely lacking in labour, because it's youth have been over-encouraged to pursue University education and they cannot attract foreign labour due to high cost of living, leaving industry unable to take advantage of significant demand in certain areas. And of course, there's the fact that everything Canadian is only possible due to America - economy, military, heck, even pop-culture and "unique" identity are completely reliant on the US (the main crux of Canadian identity being taking pride in "we're not American"). There is a massive reckoning coming for Canada in the next few decades, likely stagnation on par with Japan of the 70s-90s, despite all the immigration. When the global debt crisis finally starts to rear it's ugly head, Canada will be one of the hardest hit, make no mistake.
I am Canadian and I can say that this is by far the most accurate video I've seen about Canada. Good job guys!
You even believe the part where he said we have "good government"? LOL
The $100.00 bill absolutely has a smell to it, and to me it definitely smells of Maple Syrup. However, the older the bill the weaker the scent, and there are people who can not smell anything different about it. The Canadian Mint has also denied that anything is used to make it smell different.
Yes our economy is based around the price nof maple syrup.. LOL
The risk aversion issue is very prominent. It is hard to drive concensus in this country and most companies and government agencies are racing towards second place.
As a canadian I can say that unless you have 2 billion dollars in the bank, u shouldn't move here. A burgur costs 20$ and minimum wage is 15$ at least in B.C
Canadian here, if your wondering about how the 100$ bill smells I can confirm it smells like maple syrup if its a new one that has been recently printed but it'll loose its scent after awhile though. Also I love your video its incredibly interesting to hear about my countries economy into more depth. Great work, keep going and I wish you all the best.
I kept a $100 bill in a small box for a month. After all that time in there when I opened the box all I could smell was maple syrup and I was like "WHO SPILLED MAPLE SYRUP IN MY CASH BOX!!!?" then I realized that's how they come to you. Slathered in maple syrup XD. God bless this ridicules country!
its a myth its not true
But i think more best country is a S.Korea or Germany. even they countries have no enough nature resource. but Canada already has strategic resources. so I Canadian's success is no surprise.
A coworker told me this once but I refuse to believe it. Maybe the moment you use it at checkout and goes into the drawer it loses its scent. All things considered I would rather have money not smell like anything because its less likely the person getting their change back will like you in the long run. It would be better for business overall. But I wish they would put a drawing of maple syrup on the 100$
not socialist yet but … with the rainbow socialist government
Very proud of our Canadian cousins up north. Having approximately 12 percent equivalent of America's population. Canada has a diverse population and organized system of fairness. Canada is very impressive to me and salute them. I haw always said that if I was not a American, then I would rather be Canadian. From US American Air Force Security Police Military Veteran. GOD speed to Canada and all the people.
As you say this I bet you are laughing your arse off because you know we can’t tell you what we really think of Canada.
It's scary how well researched this video is.
Thank you 🙏
its also scary that you bought the BS. Is a Fact. Canada is one of the most indebted countries in the world. You
have normalcy bias.
@@jeanpaulfelix4095 Yes I am aware of the liabilities. He even mentions Canada 's exorbitant household debt in the video. I agree that the title is somewhat inaccurate. But what I'm more impressed about is how he dissected its economic exports, population dynamics, shortcomings, and it's culture.
Really and just by looking at the thumbs up numbers, many are delusional. That or getting a hand-out from the Liberals.
@@EconomicRaven more people speak mandarin now than french in Canada...
If Canada is so rich, why do we have 53% of Canadian living from paycheck to paycheck? The statistics were discussed recently on many news channels. There are evictions across the country because people can not pay their rent. We do have a problem with the distribution of wealth.
Statistically speaking 95% of the world population has it worse. It's not good anywhere.
@@nicksmith9 That's why we have to use different approaches to distribute the world’s riches so everyone can prosper.
@@AndreaMagdalenaKosha agree
@@AndreaMagdalenaKosha you asking for a lot from an entire world.
@@flavorlabtoronto The entire world has ALL the power; all people need to do is unite to work for a common goal from which we all benefit.
Haven't had a double double since 2013, can't wait to be back
Check back in fifty years. The best years were behind us and now slipping into " under developed" country status. A third of the population is creating the " taken for granted" wealth. That percenrage is getting smaller and transformation into a nanny state is the current situation.
As a Canadian, I can say this video provides a very accurate economic view of Canada.
Thank you for watching 🙏
Are you serious?
Canadian here. Not a fan of our high taxes and publicly funded Healthcare. It's a good country if you want to be mediocre. If you have ambition and dreams, better to find another place.
You got it backwards: The saying is: "When the US sneezes, Canada catches a cold". This refers to the fact that in an economic downturn, we get hit harder than the US.
while that may be the saying, it's not necessarily true. For example Canada faired MUCH better than the US during The Great Recession. Not a single bank defaulted in the country, unlike the UK or US
And it was the same thing during the 2008 subprime crisis
I don’t think that is the case anymore. The Canadian economy is not so dependent on the U.S and we have much better banking laws and regulations.
@@patrickbajorek5500 thats because we had a good financial minister at the time who almost completely stopped the problem from manifesting. But now all the regulations have been removed by the Trudeau government, so were back in square one
That's why I keep a close eye on what's happening in the states even though I'm Canadian. Both our countries are intertwined. If anything big/significant happens to them, will definitely affect us
Canada is "rich", but you wouldn't know it if you lived here, also in more recent years trade is beginning to shift more towards China than the USA. I heard an apt description once of the Canadian economy, some guy had said Canada is like the East India of specialized labor and I think it relatively accurate
We just "sell more" to China in the recent years doesn't mean Canada's economy depends on them, however it is what CCP trying to advertise to the Canadians... The relationship between Canada and USA is irreplaceable.
Not to mention China economy is in a deep shxt now, decades of lies and hide by the CCP are about to be busted.
@@chrisyip_colabear one can only hope...
@@chrisyip_colabear you don't understand about economics, luckily, and also about ccp. Brainwashed
India indeed just come downtown
No doubt Canada is one of the best country but it could easily become the best country of the world. It lacks great leadership.
Once again, another person that can THINK. Not too many of those in Canada. Don't you love those RUclips videos that claim Canada is the best country in the world. The question is, I wonder in what other countries he has lived in to make a silly statement like that. Of course, if you came from some banana republic as a refugee to Canada, it would be the greatest. By the way, I was born here and I can say that because I am not blind and have travelled the world.
@@achristian7015 then why are you still in Canada?
@@mjor6406 Born here, how about you?
@@achristian7015 born and raised in Alberta. Then why are you still here if you think other countries are better?
@@mjor6406 Well for starters and if you think it is so easy, can you get me Australian or New Zealand citizenship? I am not so brain dead to think everything is so much better in Canada like many of those really dumb RUclips videos claim. You realize one of them even stated that we produce more maple syrup than anyone else. Wow, what an effing claim to fame. We produce nothing in this country. Everytime I want something, I either have to pay overpriced Canadian pricing due to an extra middleman or slip over to the US and buy it there for a lot less.
The healthcare system is not functioning as intended. A year out from this video we're seeing emergency room closures. Our units have been understaffed for years, and I don't even want to think about the long term care facilities.
Pardon me, but as a Canadian I remember that the emphasis on multiculturalism (in contrast to the American "melting pot" idea) started in the late '60s. It was a way to get english-speaking Canadians to be more accepting of the huge french-speaking population's desire to not have their culture swallowed up. In Toronto there were also festivals celebrating other peoples - such as the Irish or Japanese who form part of our mosaic.
Multiculturalism is stupid, I got Indian friends but they all act Canadian. People need to have the same culture & customs to interoperate with each other.
@@levelup1279 Ignorance is a disease, just putting that out there man... ._.
@@anagonyaowusu3119 No, that's called interculturalism, not ignorance.
100 dollar bills do smell of maple. Depends on how new it tho.
The government once printed a few of those bills, but it is not the case anymore.
all do
you are wrong
@@chip4792 they all do it’s just that the 100 gets circulated less than the smaller bills like the 20’s and the 10’s
No, they don't. It's in your head.
You don’t live in Canada, so I don’t think your video is highly accurate but it’s hell working for the economy of Canada.
Why does not living in Canada mean his video isn't accurate?
@@adeshkantha7034 Because looking in from the outside is never the same as being on the inside.
@@killman369547 You are right! Video is not 100% accurate. I'm bord in Canada and live in Canada.(from Quebec so sorry for my english) I think maybe video "cut round the corner" and go to the "Trudeau image of Canada" and stereotypes. The video does not tell lies but does not tell all. Canada look good from outside but have a lot of problems in the inside.
An immigrant from Europe said that in Canada you have to work for every single penny. for the majority of people, most jobs are grossly undervalued here.
In Canada the price of the average condo unit is about 7x the annual household income. We are not really that wealthy, there are few European countries with a worse ratio than this. People will say we are still rich from a global perspective, but think of how far we have fallen in 2 short generations. In the 60s you could buy a HOUSE for 1.5x the average household income at a time when most women were housewives.
I know it's highly unlikely but could you make a video about Hungary? That place is in a wierd limbo, people either can't tell where it is or they have been there and loved it. As far as I can tell, economy channels tend to avoid hungary due to fishy statistics (Like in russia or belarus)
the Raven will fly over Hungary soon!
Interesting, one of those countries you rarely hear about. What other country is overall standard of life in Hungary comparable to?
@@zeeshandogar9406 I'd say similar to Poland, although Poland has been gaining better economic progress than Hungary.
I am from Hungary but live in Canada now...the last 10 years economically is a breakthrough...so much more diversified than before...
@@richardnemeth5911 Poland is at a different scale due to population size and geographic location including having a seashore...it is in a easier position to get it developed....
Being Canadian its nice to see when people talk about us. Everyone always talks about the USA
bro canada is usa without canada knowing it
@@destructoidx99 no it is not
@@cardemon4948 yes i would be in denial but its the truth canada is usas baby
@@destructoidx99 Canada’s more of the Uk’s baby than the US.
@@destructoidx99 We have barely anything to do with the Us except trade.
Thank You so much. Your documentaries are really so informative and educative. I feel immense pleasure to gain so much knowledge in a short but very beautifully filmed documentaries. I suggest you must mention date and time of film making so that even if someone watches it years later he could relate the economic progress and calculate for himself the current figures to some extent.
Canada is great, we definitely do rely on the United States and some other countries. I was born in British Columbia and now I’m living in the Yukon, I have to say it is very cold 🥶. As of March we Yukoner’s are experiencing the most snow all year, where as Vancouver where I was born is experiencing bushes blossoming!
I was born and live in Vancouver. The diversity in culture and our willingness to get along is our greatest asset as I see it... Ty for the vid
Brother
Hlo dude r u Canadian?
You must live every day with your head in the sand then
@@ML-ov7wo Wow. A true pessimist. If it works for you...
Then you haven’t seen how much more multicultural the other parts of the world is. Get out there and check out the world, you’ll be surprised how behind Canada is with everything, including multiculturalism. Oh, if you’re not adventurous enough, you can start with the UK. ;)
8:32 You got that statement reversed. When USA sneezes Canada get a cold (or as some say pneumonia).
@S I have always heard the proverb stated: "The USA sneezes and Canada gets a cold." Which makes more sense, than the way you describe it.
The Sooner Canada Joins The "CANZUK " trade agreement So Much The Better..
The thing said about immigration working harder is not true, as per government stats, 92%of the Syrian immigrants that came into Canada are still on welfare
Canadian here, eh! Good work representing Canada in the video. Also, very true where we need to stop showing social programs over people!
Thank you 🙏
As a Canadian myself, I enjoyed this video. Sorry eh 😂
Thank you 🙏
Oye kivve aa senghhh
Hanjii kidda?
@@hargunsenghsidhu tu kithe rehna ya? Canadian eh?
@@hargun.singhh Bhaji mai Mohali, Panjab rehnda hn
The thumbnail should be-
Why Canada can't be so Rich
Very true. Just a tax and debt slave country. Waiting for next immigrant to take on the huge debts to keep the ponzi scheme going on.
@@rkt81 Is it really like that over there? I was contemplating emigrating to Canada
@@rkt81 this comment needs more thumbs up lol, we should really be increasing the quality of the current Canadians rather than trying to keep on bringing in more people. Eventually, we will reach capacity on earth. Also, because of the high taxes, cost of living and relatively low wages, it becomes very difficult to actually live and not just survive for the lowest earners.
Good one. Someone has a brain
Sorry, but as a Canadian, I don't see how Canada is "so rich". Same jobs here pay 30-50% less than in the US. Our cost of living is higher too.
because its the governement thats rich, we’re being exploited and they’re filling their pockets
Canada is like another dream country alongside Nordic/Scandinavian countries.
Love from Indonesia
You're living in a dream world. Go and live in countries with some of the highest suicide rates.
Could you make a video about for example the DRC, would be a bit different from all these advanced economies.
I'm Canadian and I have to remind myself, "Oh yeah, we ARE rich...." sometimes.
Hlo brother
I’m Canadian, and to me it’s the best country in the world. The only thing I would change, is making things less expensive, but that’s about it.
Lies again? Private Jet Changi Airport
also off question OK if you go to Canada country OK and I buy vehicle over there then went I want to go back to my home country to visit friends and family member what will happen to the vehicle???????????thank you for help sorry for bad english
can u please explain
About the quality of food: It varies greatly depending on the region. For example, Montreal is a foodie's paradise.
Shut up
I emigrated to Canada at age 14 and having travelled to many other countries, after 50 years here, I cannot conceive living anywhere else.
Living in Canada all my life I must say it is a nice country to live in. I am very lucky in my life so I find that I get to enjoy the best parts of Canada. The people for the most part are very friendly there are lots of immigrants so you get to see lots of different cultures live together. Our gas prices are just skyrocketing which is one thing that is a cause of high taxes.
also off question OK if you go to Canada country OK and I buy vehicle over there then went I want to go back to my home country to visit friends and family member what will happen to the vehicle???????????thank you for help sorry for bad english
@@Gloryboyquan depends where you store it.
@Addison Huy right what are the options to store it please explain
@@Add50326 please explain thoroughly please
@@Gloryboyquan if you are flying you can keep it at the airport.
Being Born in Canada I can say the baby low rate simple cause we can not afford children. Most work for 12$ an hour at 44 hours a week, on a single income. With only a 900$ income a month, most rents are 700+ and utilities on top of that ( which many do with the basics power/water and only internet) along with cell phones, bonus being TV/home phone ($200 a month extra) and the groceries on top of that. Lets not count the rise in Realty Housing costs. So how can one afford a home mortgage, car insurance and a child on top of all those basics? Canada Homeless is now growing in the eastern coast to show how imbalanced it is. this can be seen More in New Brunswick, where the Elders are higher in population in regions like Miramichi, Rexton and Campbellton etc. Where a lot of the younger generations move to different areas of Canada from NB like Alberta, BC, Ontario. Canada still has a long way to go as issues are rising each passing year for sustainable income. PS no the 100$ does not smell like maple syrup.
keep up the good work...highly appreciated
Thank you 🙏
Thank you for a very interesting video. We lived several years in Montreal and I think you’ve got it about right. As a European your having to explain (presumably to Americans) that it is not socialist seems hilarious! But you and the comments touch on a very important point for the future that we have to face in Europe as well: what comes after an ageing service economy? In UK we are already desperately overcrowded and don’t really have the luxury of importing young, fit tax-paying immigrants for much longer. Is the future that we all become poor in the developed west and other parts of the world like Asia and eventually Africa supply all our goods and food and become rich? Our prime minister is telling us we can become a high wage and high skill economy but I fear this is a short term effect - why don’t the highly educated Chinese become just as skilled?
The Chinese are already highly educated and skilled as can be witnessed in the electric vehicles they have developed and the other electrical/electronic goods coming out of China now. They have a huge population and see fit to forcibly retrain Uighurs to provide cheap Labour to manufacture the clothes, PPE and all other types of low cost consumer goods they manufacture. We must continue to develop knowledge based industries around our leading universities otherwise our children will face very difficult futures.
India and China comprised of roughly 60% of the world economy before the 1800s. I think the balance of power is just moving back to its natural state.
Oftentimes, I considered moving to Canada. It is so Beautiful, the areas that I have seen! When I was there last, it was with my ex-wife, before we were married and Niagra Falls was wonderful! I never got a chance to return for my helicopter tour over The Falls! I guess divorce does that to you, eh? The people are friendly too, not like most people, here in Detroit. No that COVID has its hooks in things, I guess I can only see Canada again from Television and Books. I love Canada! As a child, my mother took me there a few times! God, I wish I could go there again!
Treat yourself if you ever visit Canada again, go to British Columbia not Ontario. Then you'll see some Canada's true beauty 😉
I would love ❤️ to see B.C., home of The Lions! I have heard that Vancouver is a very beautiful ❤️ place! It would be a treat to see The BC Lions play a game. When my mom was alive, before Dimentia set in, we would watch as many CFL games on TV as we could watch and she would say to me that our Detroit Lions could learn how to catch a football like them.
Don't, it is a shithole now....... I've lived here my entire life and have observed things here since I was young.... The changes are horrendous..... The country is being run into the ground and very quickly becoming a 3rd world nation.
@@flynn4838 a 3rd world nation???? Idk where you lived in Canada or if you’ve actually been to a 3rd world country to make such a comparison but I have traveled to a 3rd world country and there’s no comparison or any similarities to Canada. I have to disagree with you on that point. I’m my opinion Canada is one of the best countries to live in, for many many reasons.
Canada is so rich because we are so blessed!
No, the Canadian 100 dollars does not smell like maple syrup
No the recently minted ones definitely do. The little maple leaf transparent dot on the left side of of the bill- if you scratch it it does smell like a hint of maple syrup. If you get the 100s that have been circulating around Toronto’s financial district they’re more likely to smell like blow though
A great place to live, once you're happy living with freezing Arctic weather for 6 months of the year!
The polymer money does indeed have a scent and it often times smells like maple syrup.
and it is not just the $100 bill, all of them can smell like maple syrup
I’ve been in Canada over 30 years now, and I’ll say that it is a good country with lots of potential yet yo be fully utilized in terms of economy and culture. Canada has humans from all over the world and this can be there asset for economic growth with advancing the economy from manufacturing to AI, Research and Development and of course - the construction industry. Much of Canada still needs developing in terms of cities to inhabit.
Not every country wants to be overpopulated like India and China.
A Canada with 1.4 billion people rather than 40 million would be a polluted mess.
I bet 1950 India with 300 million people was a prettier place to live than 2022 1.5 billion India.
Human flaws still exist though, like lust, jealousy and anger. So that’s not gonna go away anytime soon, Canada will still be as backward as f
Canada has humans from all over the world?? Should we import more animals??