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Originally Posted by Loco101
So are you suggesting that huge deficit spending is the answer?
Canada and Germany have had the lowest deficits by a good chunk as a percentage of GDP over the last number of years.
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I think that is the suggestion. The US and Italy chose not to do carbon tax instead they are running quite high deficits to create incentives for the clean energy transition.
After all Italy's 2023 deficit is at 7.4% of GDP. Highest in Europe. Big part of that is incentives for energy saving home improvements, they call it the Superbonus. The US is spending right left and center on clean energy incentives as well.
That is one of the alternatives to the Carbon tax. We could have done that instead of the carbon tax. I guess the Liberals were a bit to fiscally conservative with their thinking here.
Just for comparison Canada deficit spending per GDP is 1.1 federally and .6 provincially. So 1.7 % overall. The US is at 6.3% of GDP.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Build.It
Anecdotally, construction is booming right now on the bids front. Lots of multires projects are being bid right now.
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Not surprising given everything going on with structural changes to encourage housing construction. Interest rates are also heading down.
They are projecting a soft landing in the US, good chance we will see the same thing in Canada. All that with relatively low (compared to our peers) in deficit spending is a good thing.