Toronto – Canada’s Economy is Suddenly The Envy of The World

    37

    In this photo taken June 7, 2010, workers install fences around the Toronto Metro Convention Centre that will host the G20 summit later this month, in Toronto. Canada thinks it can teach the world a thing or two about dodging financial meltdowns. The 20 leaders at an economic summit in Toronto next weekend will find themselves in a country that has avoided a banking crisis and whose economy grew 6.1 percent in the first three months of this year. The housing market is hot and three-quarters of the 400,000 jobs lost during the recession have been recovered. (AP Photo/The Canadian Press, Adrien Veczan)Toronto – Canada thinks it can teach the world a thing or two about dodging financial meltdowns.

    Join our WhatsApp group

    Subscribe to our Daily Roundup Email


    The 20 world leaders at an economic summit in Toronto next weekend will find themselves in a country that has avoided a banking crisis where others have floundered, and whose economy grew at a 6.1 percent annual rate in the first three months of this year. The housing market is hot and three-quarters of the 400,000 jobs lost during the recession have been recovered.

    World leaders have noticed: President Barack Obama says the U.S. should take note of Canada’s banking system, and Britain’s Treasury chief is looking to emulate the Ottawa way on cutting deficits.

    The land of a thousand stereotypes — from Mounties and ice hockey to language wars and lousy weather — is feeling entitled to do a bit of crowing as it hosts the G-20 summit of wealthy and developing nations.

    “We should be proud of the performance of our financial system during the crisis,” said Finance Minister Jim Flaherty in an interview with The Associated Press.

    He recalled visiting China in 2007 and hearing suggestions “that the Canadian banks were perhaps boring and too risk-adverse. And when I was there two weeks ago some of my same counterparts were saying to me, ‘You have a very solid, stable banking system in Canada,’ and emphasizing that. There wasn’t anything about being sufficiently risk-oriented.”

    The banks are stable because, in part, they’re more regulated. As the U.S. and Europe loosened regulations on their financial industries over the last 15 years, Canada refused to do so. The banks also aren’t as leveraged as their U.S. or European peers.

    There was no mortgage meltdown or subprime crisis in Canada. Banks don’t package mortgages and sell them to the private market, so they need to be sure their borrowers can pay back the loans.

    In Canada’s concentrated banking system, five major banks dominate the market and regulators know each of the top bank executives personally.

    “Our banks were just better managed and we had better regulation,” says former Prime Minister Paul Martin, the man credited with killing off a massive government deficit in the 1990s when he was finance minister, leading to 12 straight years of budget surpluses.

    “I was absolutely amazed at senior bankers in the United States and Europe who didn’t know the extent of the problem or they didn’t know that people in some far-flung division were doing these kinds of things. It’s just beyond belief,” he told the AP.

    The Conservative Party government of Stephen Harper that took over from Martin’s Liberals in 2006 broadly stuck to his predecessor’s approach, though he cut taxes and, when recession struck, pumped stimulus money into the economy, with the result that Canada again has a large deficit.

    But it is recovering from the recession faster than others, and although its deficit is currently at a record high, the International Monetary Fund expects Canada to be the only one of the seven major industrialized democracies to return to surplus by 2015.

    This month Canada became the first among them to raise interest rates since the global financial crisis began.

    George Osborne, Britain’s Treasury chief, has vowed to follow Canada’s example on deficit reduction.

    “They brought together the best brains both inside and outside government to carry out a fundamental reassessment of the role of the state,” Osborne said in a speech.

    It’s a remarkable turnaround from 1993, when the Liberals took office facing a $30 billion deficit. Moody’s downgraded Canada’s credit rating twice. About 36 percent of the government’s revenue went toward servicing debt.

    “Our situation was dire. Canada was in a lot of trouble at that point,” Martin said. “If we were going to preserve our health care and our education system we had to do it.”

    As finance minister, he slashed spending. A weak currency and a booming U.S. economy also helped Martin balance the books. In the 1998 budget the government estimated that about 55 percent of the deficit reduction came from economic growth and 35 percent from spending cuts.

    “The rest of the world certainly thinks we’re the model to follow,” said Martin, who was prime minister from 2003 to 2006. “I’ve been asked by a lot of countries as to how to go about it.”

    Don Drummond, Martin’s budget chief at the time, says the U.S. and Europe won’t have it that easy, because the economic climate was better in the late 1990s than it is now, with large trade gains and falling interest rates.

    “There’s a lot to learn from Canada but their starting conditions are worse,” he said. “Even though we were on the precipice of a crisis we weren’t in as bad a shape as many of them are.”


    Listen to the VINnews podcast on:

    iTunes | Spotify | Google Podcasts | Stitcher | Podbean | Amazon

    Follow VINnews for Breaking News Updates


    Connect with VINnews

    Join our WhatsApp group


    37 Comments
    Most Voted
    Newest Oldest
    Inline Feedbacks
    View all comments
    Charlie Hall
    Charlie Hall
    13 years ago

    The rest of the world should learn from Canada. Smart regulation is the right way to go.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    13 years ago

    How good is their economy anyway? I looked in the paper and saw that the canadian euro is way down against the us dollar. Why do they think its so good?

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    13 years ago

    They watched the banks even in the 70’s and 80’s, If people wanted to withdraw substantial amounts of money the banks questioned it. Here, nobody questions anything!!

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    13 years ago

    Don’t they use monopoly money over there?

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    13 years ago

    But what does this help? We cennot move their anyway since ther aer no heimishe yiddin there

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    13 years ago

    They have zechut, because they support and back Israel and the Jews-that’s why they are in better financial shape.

    Anon Ibid Opcit
    Anon Ibid Opcit
    13 years ago

    We had bank regulations that were almost as good right up until the Age of Reagan. Then we threw it all out to allow the Free Market and Personal Responsibility and Financial Services Innovation and Greed is Good to rule. We decided the best thing we could do was let sociopaths be ruled by their consciences.

    What happened? We watched thirty years of theft on a scale that would have given Genghis Khan a heart attack and made the Robber Barons of the 1920s weep bitter tears of envy. We destroyed the American banking and financial sectors and we may well have torn down the rest of the world economy in our unholy haste to destroy ourselves.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    13 years ago

    na, na, you all dont belive in hashgacha pratis..because they did this or that. NO, becuse they are very supportiv to israel

    stan
    stan
    13 years ago

    Actually the Canadian Acorn is up 3% against the US Dollar.

    ShatzMatz
    ShatzMatz
    13 years ago

    You cannot compare Canada to the USA. They are a smaller country rich in resources with a lot less dragging down their economy than the USA. Healthcare costs and education costs are less than half of the US and they don’t deal with the crime and welfare problem we deal with. They also spend zilch on defense, since the chances of the US invading them is nil.

    The True Reason
    The True Reason
    13 years ago

    The true reason why Canada has been doing so well is because they are blessed.

    Why are they blessed? Because its current Prime Minister Harper has been taking a strong moral stand in support of Israel.

    That’s the reason.

    (His conservative economic policies didn’t hurt either). But it’s the blessing from above that is the real reason.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    13 years ago

    When in golus we see yad hashem it’s a big chizuk!
    Canada is the most pro isreal country in the world (after obama killed America’s traditional pro israel stance! Go harper go! Obama;time to read the bible and see that Israel is th Jewish homeland. Jeremiah wright didn’t tell u what he saw in the bible. He told u his blatanly antisemitic and anti american crony stances.shame on u 4 heeding to soros-wright-farrakhan!
    Follow harpers lead! Support democracy, not terrorism,support the peresecuted, not the ones that choose to be persecuted in the name of some religion of peace!

    Too Cold
    Too Cold
    13 years ago

    It is too cold to live in Canada. So it wouldn’t do me any good to go there.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    13 years ago

    ALL OF YOU AMERICANS HAVE ALOT TO LEARN. WOW!
    winters are cold and summers are beautiful!
    Healthcare is not 1/2 of the US. Its socialized medicine. FREE. Its not as bad as the the new yorkers say it is. (those hosp in bklyn need help)
    Schools are subsidized by the govt.
    We do have welfare like in the US
    Plenty of ppl lost money here .
    There are jews outside of Brooklyn and its daled amos.
    Euro? huh? monopoly money? Its worth more than the US dollar today.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    13 years ago

    tough city to do buisness in toronto no mazel taxes are astronomical, what is there more to say , people hoard there $

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    13 years ago

    Reichmans built Toronto economy

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    13 years ago

    I guess no one has bothered to check the tax rCanadians” pay? And being the “envy” of the world-third world of course. Over 80 % of Canada is made up of people who have entered the country since 1967. It is now known as Canuckistan to people who have lived in Canada prior to then..

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    13 years ago

    I think the heimeshe are all in Barrie and Sault St. Marie, eh

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    13 years ago

    There are plenty of heimish yidden in vancouver!!!