Quote:
Originally Posted by WhipperSnapper
All depends. This past decade has been one if not the worst for Canada in comparative international rankings. The effects plus continued erosion of our standing will be felt more and more. Much of that has to do with qualitative immigration to meet questionable growth targets. One example, we don't immigration caps on countries/regions to encourage diversity. Our overall intake of immigrants, temp visas, refugees, etc. is dominated by one small region and that will only get worse as our global standing deteriorates further. Or, everyone but the absolute desperate will pass over Canada.
Will common sense prevail or will Canadian heart strings continue to blind them?
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My sentiments exactly. My 2015 self would have had a hard time imagining Canada falling this far, but now it's almost a certainty that we'll see a Seine-Saint-Denis scale slum pop up in the GTA (though here it's in the form of dilapidated basements and crumbling crowded private condos/apartments in unsightly suburban sprawl). UK style race riots are now in the cards as well within the decade.
We're also planning future retirement with the view that the Canadian public healthcare system will collapse and won't be available for us to access when we need it. We'd wager that Canada will fail to implement any strategic healthcare reforms, meaning we'll likely be stuck with a US style system instead of a coveted European/East-Asian style healthcare system.
From an economic standpoint, we think it's unlikely that Canada will take the radical reforms needed to ween itself off its addiction to high housing prices. The real estate ponzi scheme will continue to cannibalise other sectors of the economy, and there's going to be a protracted and painful reckoning when the RE and private household debt bubble unwinds. The popping of this super bubble will devastate household incomes and set Canada back for at least a decade.
We can also see wealthy and top-talent Canadian immigrants (including the ones who have already built a life here) increasingly decide to emigrate due to the deteriorating domestic situation here, and the more attractive higher quality of life (also better weather!) in other countries who are competing for the same pool of talent and wealth. For instance, wealthy Chinese these days are more interested in relocating to Japan than Canada, and we only see that trend accelerating as Canada's value proposition keeps declining.