Quote:
Originally Posted by Architype
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The graph is cute but such long term projections are almost always wrong. Remember, Montreal was supposed to have 7M people... in the year 2000. How did that go?
Here is the article that the graph came from:
https://archive.canadianbusiness.com...treal-in-size/
The dude applied the growth rates from the latest census at the time (2016) in perpetuity.
I have a hard time imagining an 8.8M Vancouver or an 8.2M Montreal. This also assumes that the government's current immigration policies will continue for the next 40 years. Like... do the citizens of Greater Vancouver want to become a megacity (approaching the 10M threshold)?
It should be pointed out that pre-covid Montreal was still adding more people than Vancouver, widening the gap. We've yet to really see how population trends in Canada will settle post-covid.
Personally, I don't see Vancouver surpassing Montreal. Extraordinary circumstances would be necessary.
Can we talk about when Calgary will surpass Vancouver (and then of course, Montreal) though?