How Canada escaped the global recession

Unfortunately that article discounts the fact that our politicians are Keynesians to the bone - really. We aren't doing as well as this articles points out.

We are better off then just about every country in the world - but that doesn't change the fact that we are a commercial banking arm of the global cartel, our politicians rave about the genius of Keynes...we have some of the highest tax rates in the world. Our deficits are MARGINALLY smaller (per capita) then the G8 (but quite frankly, we are all on the same level...save for the USA).

Our health care is NOT what you've been told and most of the populace is either brainwashed or HO HUM status quo will have to do.
 
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Skimming that article, its conclusions are wrong.

Canada befitted from a global boom in commodity prices, caused by the Fed printing up cheap money and the bubble economies in China, Brazil, Turkey, etc buying up all the resources.

Canada's GDP printed negative today, and I expect the country to soon be in a full blown economic recession. Probably a depression when China collapses and the demand for oil evaporates.
 
We can't allow for a strong CAD...kills our oil trade with the US.

BofC will print just like the rest of 'em.

Keynesian rationalizations.
 
From what I understand (I'm no expert on the subject), Canada is sitting on a real estate / mortgage bubble of their own.
 
Not like the US, and it is largely confined to the big 6 cities - but yes...it's here.

From what I understand (I'm no expert on the subject), Canada is sitting on a real estate / mortgage bubble of their own.
 
From what I understand (I'm no expert on the subject), Canada is sitting on a real estate / mortgage bubble of their own.

75% of the sales in my city in the last 6 months of been from mainland Chinese. In a city of 17,000, and 45 minutes from a major urban centre, they have pushed up the average price of a home now to over 800 k. The prices will last as long as the Chinese continue to buy.
 
When socializing with a vice-president of a Canadian bank, I asked him why Canada never felt such a economic punch verses it's southern neighbor. His answers might not be liked on these forums, but the results are clear.

1) The Canadian government has put in place stricter regulations on the chartered banks, in other words they could not do total free market stuff that was really stupid.
2) If you got a mortgage with a major bank it stayed with that bank, in an event of an issue you were less likely to get foreclosed on, as American Institutions packaged those mortgages up and sold them off, to all kind of different financial companies, in many cases these mortgages now had multiple holders and any one of them could say no, and that meant foreclose.
3) The lenders upsold their customers to get bigger mortgages, saying the market is going to keep going up. An example, lets say a house was worth $250,000, the buyer put the minimum down payment. And was set to get the rest as a mortgage, the lender getting commission on the size of mortgage would, say hey that house according market trends will be worth $350,000 in a couple years so lets give you another 100K and you can buy that new car, take that nice trip, renovate, basically spend that money. This artificially inflated the American economy. Another point made was that when the house foreclosed they were able to keep all the goods separate from the house they had purchased with the inflated mortgage money, as the money was only on the house. When this scheme popped, it drastically reduced the amount of money going into the system, forcing "The Great Recession".

Canada never did these things, it least that's what he told me, and he had spent 20 years in the industry, and it made sense to me.
 
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Just did a quick search for canada real estate bubble. Lot's of news stories and even a dedicated website.
 
When the banking industry is as morally corrupt as it is (Canada included) with priviledges of monopolized products (currency in this case)...YES they should be regulated to the hilt.

A better solution is to end the conditions of monopoly in the first place - let the market regulate. Unfortunately the ego's of these people will not allow that to happen without a fight. Pathetic vermin will be pathetic vermin.

We don't need to regulate a faulty system - we need to destroy the faulty system and rebuild it stronger - and let the market choose the outcomes.


When socializing with a vice-president of a Canadian bank, I asked him why Canada never felt such a economic punch verses it's southern neighbor. His answers might not be liked on these forums, but the results are clear.

1) The Canadian government has put in place stricter regulations on the chartered banks, in other words they could not do total free market stuff that was really stupid.
2) If you got a mortgage with a major bank it stayed with that bank, in an event of an issue you were less likely to get foreclosed on, as American Institutions packaged those mortgages up and sold them off, to all kind of different financial companies, in many cases these mortgages now had multiple holders and any one of them could say no, and that meant foreclose.
3) The lenders upsold their customers to get bigger mortgages, saying the market is going to keep going up. An example, lets say a house was worth $250,000, the buyer put the minimum down payment. And was set to get the rest as a mortgage, the lender getting commission on the size of mortgage would, say hey that house according market trends will be worth $350,000 in a couple years so lets give you another 100K and you can buy that new car, take that nice trip, renovate, basically spend that money. This artificially inflated the American economy. Another point made was that when the house foreclosed they were able to keep all the goods separate from the house they had purchased with the inflated mortgage money, as the money was only on the house. When this scheme popped, it drastically reduced the amount of money going into the system, forcing "The Great Recession".

Canada never did these things, it least that's what he told me, and he had spent 20 years in the industry, and it made sense to me.
 
The ugly side of Canada´s banking system - leverage
Take a look a the Tangible Common Equity Ratio - TCE (explanation here: http://www.investopedia.com/terms/t/tangible-common-equity-ratio.asp#axzz1WiCI5E9I)
Canada%20Risk.jpg
 
75% of the sales in my city in the last 6 months of been from mainland Chinese. In a city of 17,000, and 45 minutes from a major urban centre, they have pushed up the average price of a home now to over 800 k. The prices will last as long as the Chinese continue to buy.

lol once they are done there, they are coming to Toronto
 
Yes, thank you for pointing that out.

The big banks are allowed to, by law, hold ZERO assets in order to loan. The mortgage industry is confetti paper created out of nothing and the banks are sitting sitting on NOTHING but income providing pieces of paper (mortgages). It's a fucking joke.

The ugly side of Canada´s banking system - leverage
Take a look a the Tangible Common Equity Ratio - TCE (explanation here: http://www.investopedia.com/terms/t/tangible-common-equity-ratio.asp#axzz1WiCI5E9I)
Canada%20Risk.jpg
 
Ill admit im very ignorant and out of date (i did a report on the canadian banking system in 2007 for a finance class) about the canadian economic situation. This was a great read and very informative.
 
There is nothing that special about our economic situation.

We will print into the abyss and follow global money masters into the vortex of either hyperinflation or The Great Stagflation.

Either way, price/cost structures will rise across the board (albeit at different rates) and Canada will be one of the countries that throws it's people under the bus to accomodate The New World order.

What happens when 3 billion deluded sheep see prices rise 200% in 2-3 years and are ALREADY hopelessly dependent on the State for necessities?

Yup you got it. Nazism.

Incoming National Socialism for virtually every country in the world.

The 4th Reich is coming and it is NOT the way you imagined it would be.

Ill admit im very ignorant and out of date (i did a report on the canadian banking system in 2007 for a finance class) about the canadian economic situation. This was a great read and very informative.
 
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There is nothing that special about our economic situation.

We will print into the abyss and follow global money masters into the vortex of either hyperinflation or The Great Stagflation.

Either way, price/cost structures will rise across the board (albeit at different rates) and Canada will be one of the countries that throws it's people under the bus to accomodate The New World order.

What happens when 3 billion deluded sheep see prices rise 200% in 2-3 years and are ALREADY hopelessly dependent on the State for necessities?

Yup you got it. Nazism.

Incoming National Socialism for virtually every country in the world.

The 4th Reich is coming and it is NOT the way you imagined it would be.

Yeah, i remember watching Krugman on tv saying that Inflation at this point would be a good thing.
 
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