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Mar 27 2025 09:13am
Canada is only great if you're wealthy - tons of open space

Canada right now is starkly class divided - the wealthy vs everyone else

You'll notice that everyone supporting the status quo in Canada are extremely wealthy
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Mar 27 2025 09:24am
QoL metrics are dogshit, but it's also something of a false dichotomy. If the United States and Canada were to establish free movement and a common border you'd see a dramatic increase in provincial GDP. In terms of HDI, all of the north-eastern states are all significantly better off than their Canadian counterparts. The question is whether Canadians want the QoL and relative wealth of the American north-east, not whether or not they want to have the QoL and relative wealth of Mississippi or Alabama.


Again it’s straight to "muh GDP" while brushing of QoL metrics that vastly favorise Canada. Interestingly you bring back the quality of life but only for the very Democratic north-east. Obviously we’d prefer to keep our qualify of life and have a favourable economy, but there’s absolutely no way that would happen by getting annexed.

e/typo

This post was edited by Chainsaw47 on Mar 27 2025 09:25am
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Mar 27 2025 10:00am
Are we really arguing over the difference between 79.6 and 80.4 as some sort of be all end all of QoL? Canada clearly disagrees, or they wouldn't be legalizing euthanasia. Stop coping and don't be become obese.


You used the word significantly.

Americans, you can have more wealth! We just want your natural resources, we will also happily take your scenic rockies and turn it into another Montana where every small town is destroyed by the ultra rich making them unhabitable for the current rural people who live there.

No thank you.

This post was edited by SBD on Mar 27 2025 10:04am
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Mar 27 2025 10:09am
I mean, Canada is ahead of the USA in home ownership, the average Canadian has less credit card debt, and QoL by most metrics are higher in Canada.

I'd say credit cards are a pretty good indicator when you start using wages as the be all end all.

Average Credit Card Balance:
The average credit card balance for Canadians in the second quarter of 2024 was $4,300

The average credit card balance per American consumer with an outstanding balance rose from $6,380 in the third quarter of 2024 to $6,580 in the fourth quarter of 2024.

As a I Canadian, I personally have no desire to ever become American. It's always wages, wages ,wages yet most statistics that matter other than GDP still favour Canada.


I'm shocked you led with anything housing related as a strength for Canada when in reality it's one of the biggest weaknesses of Canada.

Canadians have one of the highest burdens when it comes to home relating debt/disposable income. Above pretty much all G7 nations, maybe with Australia being the exception.

Home ownership is a bad metric if you don't consider the flip side of it, which is the overwhelming debt that comes with it, and debt servicing costs that's drowning out other type of spend/savings. I was on vacation recently and met this Canadian lady and she was telling me how her son with his entire family lived with her for 10 years because they had no chance to purchase a home in southern Ontario.

Even the average CC balance is a flawed metric unless fully understood what it's made up of. You realize some of us can carry higher balances because we're richer in absolute terms, therefore we spend more on a monthly basis, that doesn't necessarily mean we're carrying that balance.
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Mar 27 2025 10:16am

Canadians have one of the highest burdens when it comes to home relating debt/disposable income.


Right.. but the US is still worse. And the flip side (for us) is just rent reliance and ever expanding capital owners taking over the entire real estate market in the United States. We never even learned our lesson from the 2008 housing crisis.
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Mar 27 2025 10:18am
I'm shocked you led with anything housing related as a strength for Canada when in reality it's one of the biggest weaknesses of Canada.

Canadians have one of the highest burdens when it comes to home relating debt/disposable income. Above pretty much all G7 nations, maybe with Australia being the exception.

Home ownership is a bad metric if you don't consider the flip side of it, which is the overwhelming debt that comes with it, and debt servicing costs that's drowning out other type of spend/savings. I was on vacation recently and met this Canadian lady and she was telling me how her son with his entire family lived with her for 10 years because they had no chance to purchase a home in southern Ontario.

Even the average CC balance is a flawed metric unless fully understood what it's made up of. You realize some of us can carry higher balances because we're richer in absolute terms, therefore we spend more on a monthly basis, that doesn't necessarily mean we're carrying that balance.


If it was such a burden, Canadians would have higher CC debt to carry on with daily lives. They don't. What's the difference in median wealth? Is it significant, no, believe median wealth is actually behind Canada. You could say, well net wealth is tied to the inflating asset value of homes, but when you look at median disposable income, its not really that different. Obviously averages are but that's expected with the massive wealth sitting in America at the top end.

This post was edited by SBD on Mar 27 2025 10:19am
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Mar 27 2025 10:19am
Right.. but the US is still worse. And the flip side (for us) is just rent reliance and ever expanding capital owners taking over the entire real estate market in the United States. We never even learned our lesson from the 2008 housing crisis.


No it's actually not.

Quote
Recent data highlights that Canadian households face a substantial financial strain from home payments. For instance, mortgage payments have been reported to consume a significant portion of household earnings, with estimates suggesting they account for around 59% of household income in recent years, according to sources like Bloomberg cited in public discussions. This figure reflects the pressure from rising home prices and interest rates, which have outpaced income growth in many parts of the country.

Additionally, Canada’s household debt-to-disposable-income ratio is among the highest in the G7, standing at 175.5% in the second quarter of 2024, down from a peak of 185.4% in late 2021, according to Statistics Canada. While this ratio includes all household debt (not just mortgages), mortgages constitute about 75% of that total, indicating that home payments are a major contributor to this burden. The debt service ratio—measuring obligated payments of principal and interest as a share of disposable income—was 14.97% in mid-2024, near historical highs, further underscoring the cost of maintaining home-related debt.
Comparatively, other countries like the United States show a lower burden. U.S. household debt-to-disposable-income ratios are significantly less, with mortgage debt service payments typically around 3-4% of disposable income in recent years, according to Federal Reserve data.



If it was such a burden, Canadians would have higher CC debt to carry on with daily lives. They don't. What's the difference in median wealth? Is it significant, no, believe median wealth is actually behind Canada. You could say, well net wealth is tied to the inflating asset value of homes, but when you look at median disposable income, its not really that different. Obviously averages are but that's expected with the massive wealth sitting in America at the top end.


It is a huge burden no matter how you slice it. Pointing to CC debt as some derivative why it wouldn't be doesn't make sense tbh.


This post was edited by ofthevoid on Mar 27 2025 10:23am
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Mar 27 2025 10:23am
No it's actually not.


you're speaking of household debt, oh okay. yeah but that's just one thing to focus on. the amount of credit debt, medical debt, and many other forms of financial debt are the problems within the US. you can look at one form of debt and say the US has it better. that's misleading, and I think is the intention because conservatives often do this.
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Mar 27 2025 10:25am
you're speaking of household debt, oh okay. yeah but that's just one thing to focus on. the amount of credit debt, medical debt, and many other forms of financial debt are the problems within the US. you can look at one form of debt and say the US has it better. that's misleading, and I think is the intention because conservatives often do this.


household debt is just combined debt of that household of all debt sources.
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Mar 27 2025 10:26am
you're speaking of household debt, oh okay. yeah but that's just one thing to focus on. the amount of credit debt, medical debt, and many other forms of financial debt are the problems within the US. you can look at one form of debt and say the US has it better. that's misleading, and I think is the intention because conservatives often do this.


There's nothing misleading here. It tells you 75% of the household debt there is relating to housing. So even if you strip out non-housing debt it's still ~12% vs 3-4% for the US.

Canadians spend overwhelmingly more on just housing than we do down here. It's not a strength by any objective metric.

This post was edited by ofthevoid on Mar 27 2025 10:27am
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