Quote:
Originally Posted by someone123
But Canada was tied with the US for GDP per capita back in 2015 and real income per capita used to be higher.
Here's an old chart: https://www150.statcan.gc.ca/n1/dail...71122b-eng.htm
Apparently back in the 80's Canada hit 10% higher productivity than the US too. I think Canada has just had poor economic policy recently. Obviously Canada will not hit the total output of the USA but a metropolitan area in Canada can hit comparable economic output to a similar-sized American city.
|
There's
the infamous Canadian chart posted by people on the right showing that in 2015 (when Trudeau was elected and right before Trump 1), GDP and productivity (which is GDP/hour worked) growth diverged sharply between the two countries, with the US taking off like a rocket ship and Canada stagnating. The implication is that the fault is entirely our own.
What I would say is that, around 2015, Canada and the US took a divergent path where Canadian Federal government chose to import people, and the US Federal government chose to
borrow heavily. Both countries chose the option that was easy for them: Canada is more immigrant-friendly, and the US has a reserve currency.
The result of this is that there would be a divergence in per capita GDP between the two countries, since the people Canada imported are generally low in labour productivity and per capita contribution to GDP, while the US economy was injected with a ton of cash.
Neither country could do what the other country did. If Canada ran deficits above 7% of our GDP, we'd default and be the next Argentina. If the US continuously brought in 12 million immigrants a year, the societal backlash could almost be civil war-like. But the US deficit policy and the Canadian immigration policy aren't sustainable in their respective countries, either. If I had to pick, I would choose the Canadian approach because at least you can stop it completely, expect some people to go back, and not have any major externalities like having to raise taxes, cut spending for major political blocs that have become accustomed to that spending, or see your credit downgrade or risk losing reserve currency status.