Canada
Related: About this forumWhat the leaders need to understand about Canada’s shifting economy
JEFF RUBIN
Special to The Globe and Mail
Published Monday, Sep. 21, 2015 9:37AM EDT
Last updated Monday, Sep. 21, 2015 11:43AM EDT
Oil sands operators have already shelved billions in planned investment. Indeed, the oil sectors rapid implosion in spending is the principle cause of the oil-inspired downturn thats caused the much-discussed economic contraction weve seen so far this year. And that doesnt even take into consideration the future of the two million barrels a day of oil sands production that currently exists. The billions spent on that output is already gone and the jobs that depend on it may follow shortly.
Whether the countrys shifting economic fortunes will end up being the deciding factor in next months election remains to be seen. Regardless of the outcome, however, its certain that the party forming the next government will end up presiding over a very different Canadian economy than the one the Harper regime spent the last decade trying to mould.
Full article: http://www.theglobeandmail.com/report-on-business/what-the-leaders-need-to-understand-about-canadas-shifting-economy/article26450995/
Wellstone ruled
(34,661 posts)the Regan Bush economic model of the late 70's. They plowed Billions in Commodity development and the Chicago theory that there will never be a day when the rest of the Globe would say,we can do that. Same crap happened to Australia and if one thinks you can just keep selling stuff to China,well that is a house of cards that is in full collapse.
Spazito
(54,357 posts)The "Harper government" focused solely on the energy sector, oil and natural gas, predominantly oil, while ignoring manufacturing and other economic drivers, reduced the diversity needed to continue growth and, in bad times in the energy sector, cushion the damage.
Diversity is the key and we know full well diversity is an anathema to the "Harper government" whether it's in economic drivers or refugees who don't resemble "old stock Canadians".