shockedcanadian
Diamond Member
- Aug 6, 2012
- 37,990
- 36,521
- 2,905
Lead by the innovative-less Ontario Police State. I've warned of this for decades, myself a victim of the system in which I could have been a strong asset for Canadas economy and global competitiveness but was destroyed,
Smoke and mirrors, optics and P.R don't fly easily in the digital communication age. This is why CSIS has to reign in these covert police agencies, their nepotism and the politicians who bend for them.
Don't listen to others who are only protecting their rackets. Ontario will be belly up before long thanks to the abusers.
bcbc.com
A recent OECD report shows the extent to which Canada’s efforts to stimulate demand for interest-sensitive sectors of the economy and boost labour supply growth helped to raise real per capita GDP growth over 2007-2020. As discussed in our previous blog, the short answer is: Ottawa’s policies did not help a whole lot.
Canada’s real GDP per capita grew by 0.8% per annum over 2007-2020, ranking us in the third quartile among advanced countries. In other words, we were towards the back of the pack but not at the very bottom. That’s about to change – and not for the better. Other countries are predicted to move ahead of us in making their economies more productive while Canada’s economy stagnates.
The same OECD report offers insights on whether Canadians can look forward to meaningful gains in average living standards in the decades to come. The findings are sobering. The OECD predicts Canada can at best achieve real per capita GDP growth of only 0.7 percent per annum over 2020-2030 (Figure 1a). This places us dead last among advanced countries.
Smoke and mirrors, optics and P.R don't fly easily in the digital communication age. This is why CSIS has to reign in these covert police agencies, their nepotism and the politicians who bend for them.
Don't listen to others who are only protecting their rackets. Ontario will be belly up before long thanks to the abusers.

OECD predicts Canada will be the worst performing advanced economy…
The OECD predicts Canada can at best achieve real per capita GDP growth of only 0.7 percent per annum over 2020-2030. This places us dead last among advanced countries. via @BizCouncilBC

Was Canada able to grow real incomes over 2007-2020?
A recent OECD report shows the extent to which Canada’s efforts to stimulate demand for interest-sensitive sectors of the economy and boost labour supply growth helped to raise real per capita GDP growth over 2007-2020. As discussed in our previous blog, the short answer is: Ottawa’s policies did not help a whole lot.
Canada’s real GDP per capita grew by 0.8% per annum over 2007-2020, ranking us in the third quartile among advanced countries. In other words, we were towards the back of the pack but not at the very bottom. That’s about to change – and not for the better. Other countries are predicted to move ahead of us in making their economies more productive while Canada’s economy stagnates.
Canada will be the worst performing advanced economy over 2020-2030
The same OECD report offers insights on whether Canadians can look forward to meaningful gains in average living standards in the decades to come. The findings are sobering. The OECD predicts Canada can at best achieve real per capita GDP growth of only 0.7 percent per annum over 2020-2030 (Figure 1a). This places us dead last among advanced countries.