Canada Kicks Ass
US should follow Canada

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Scape @ Mon Feb 09, 2009 12:04 pm

Canadian banks are typically leveraged at 18 to 1--compared with U.S. banks at 26 to 1.

$1:
The legendary editor of The New Republic, Michael Kinsley, once held a "Boring Headline Contest" and decided that the winner was "Worthwhile Canadian Initiative." Twenty-two years later, the magazine was rescued from its economic troubles by a Canadian media company, which should have taught us Americans to be a bit more humble. Now there is even more striking evidence of Canada's virtues. Guess which country, alone in the industrialized world, has not faced a single bank failure, calls for bailouts or government intervention in the financial or mortgage sectors. Yup, it's Canada. In 2008, the World Economic Forum ranked Canada's banking system the healthiest in the world. America's ranked 40th, Britain's 44th.

Canada has done more than survive this financial crisis. The country is positively thriving in it. Canadian banks are well capitalized and poised to take advantage of opportunities that American and European banks cannot seize. The Toronto Dominion Bank, for example, was the 15th-largest bank in North America one year ago. Now it is the fifth-largest. It hasn't grown in size; the others have all shrunk.

So what accounts for the genius of the Canadians? Common sense. Over the past 15 years, as the United States and Europe loosened regulations on their financial industries, the Canadians refused to follow suit, seeing the old rules as useful shock absorbers. Canadian banks are typically leveraged at 18 to 1—compared with U.S. banks at 26 to 1 and European banks at a frightening 61 to 1. Partly this reflects Canada's more risk-averse business culture, but it is also a product of old-fashioned rules on banking.

Canada has also been shielded from the worst aspects of this crisis because its housing prices have not fluctuated as wildly as those in the United States. Home prices are down 25 percent in the United States, but only half as much in Canada. Why? Well, the Canadian tax code does not provide the massive incentive for overconsumption that the U.S. code does: interest on your mortgage isn't deductible up north. In addition, home loans in the United States are "non-recourse," which basically means that if you go belly up on a bad mortgage, it's mostly the bank's problem. In Canada, it's yours. Ah, but you've heard American politicians wax eloquent on the need for these expensive programs—interest deductibility alone costs the federal government $100 billion a year—because they allow the average Joe to fulfill the American Dream of owning a home. Sixty-eight percent of Americans own their own homes. And the rate of Canadian homeownership? It's 68.4 percent.

Canada has been remarkably responsible over the past decade or so. It has had 12 years of budget surpluses, and can now spend money to fuel a recovery from a strong position. The government has restructured the national pension system, placing it on a firm fiscal footing, unlike our own insolvent Social Security. Its health-care system is cheaper than America's by far (accounting for 9.7 percent of GDP, versus 15.2 percent here), and yet does better on all major indexes. Life expectancy in Canada is 81 years, versus 78 in the United States; "healthy life expectancy" is 72 years, versus 69. American car companies have moved so many jobs to Canada to take advantage of lower health-care costs that since 2004, Ontario and not Michigan has been North America's largest car-producing region.

I could go on. The U.S. currently has a brain-dead immigration system. We issue a small number of work visas and green cards, turning away from our shores thousands of talented students who want to stay and work here. Canada, by contrast, has no limit on the number of skilled migrants who can move to the country. They can apply on their own for a Canadian Skilled Worker Visa, which allows them to become perfectly legal "permanent residents" in Canada—no need for a sponsoring employer, or even a job. Visas are awarded based on education level, work experience, age and language abilities. If a prospective immigrant earns 67 points out of 100 total (holding a Ph.D. is worth 25 points, for instance), he or she can become a full-time, legal resident of Canada.

Companies are noticing. In 2007 Microsoft, frustrated by its inability to hire foreign graduate students in the United States, decided to open a research center in Vancouver. The company's announcement noted that it would staff the center with "highly skilled people affected by immigration issues in the U.S." So the brightest Chinese and Indian software engineers are attracted to the United States, trained by American universities, then thrown out of the country and picked up by Canada—where most of them will work, innovate and pay taxes for the rest of their lives.

If President Obama is looking for smart government, there is much he, and all of us, could learn from our quiet—OK, sometimes boring—neighbor to the north. Meanwhile, in the councils of the financial world, Canada is pushing for new rules for financial institutions that would reflect its approach. This strikes me as, well, a worthwhile Canadian initiative.

   



hwacker @ Mon Feb 09, 2009 12:10 pm

$1:
if President Obama is looking for smart government


Any guy that can walk on water doesn't need help.

   



Scape @ Mon Feb 09, 2009 12:18 pm

Just ask Tiger Woods:

   



hwacker @ Mon Feb 09, 2009 12:21 pm

Hey Tiger can play golf very well, B-HO can't do anything well.

Glad the dolt is being exposed as the idiot he is.

   



BartSimpson @ Mon Feb 09, 2009 12:29 pm

The time for the US to have a stable banking system is long past. We're economically like the Titanic right now; the smart folks are heading to the lifeboats while they can.

   



Scape @ Mon Feb 09, 2009 1:04 pm

If the US goes down the world markets go down. Were are the lifeboats then?

Obama Has Upper Hand in Stimulus Fight

$1:
The American public gives President Barack Obama a strong 67% approval rating for the way in which he is handling the government's efforts to pass an economic stimulus bill, while the Democrats and, in particular, the Republicans in Congress receive much lower approval ratings of 48% and 31%, respectively.

   



BartSimpson @ Mon Feb 09, 2009 1:50 pm

Personally, I think an economic meltdown will be good for the USA in the long run. As foreign manufacturing collapses due to the collapsing value of the dollar and the failure of overnight credit then US manuafacturing will have to come back (eventually) and it will create jobs in the USA. At the same time, our economic enemies such as China and India will face social upheaval as their newly flourishing middle classes refuse to quietly reassimilate into the ranks of the peasantry.

Yeah, there's more to why I think this will be good for the USA but it's too complex to write here and, as I've found on another site, people who are not Americans don't get my point anyway so there's not much use in posting the same stuff here. In short, a lot of the things Canadian and European liberals hate about the USA will turn out to be our strengths in these times.

   



bootlegga @ Mon Feb 09, 2009 2:07 pm

Great read Scape! R=UP

   



uwish @ Mon Feb 09, 2009 2:23 pm

yup very nice read, great post.

   



GreenTiger @ Mon Feb 09, 2009 2:32 pm

It's hard to say at this point in time that this economic meltdown is good a lot of people are hurt and getting hurt.

However if it FINALLY gets us off our dead ass about getting off the dependency of foreign oil and start us thinking more "green".

If it starts to to get us to pay attention to who our friends really are especially Canada who we have so much in common with
and frankly we can take some moral perspectives on, rather than dealing with every * tin pot dictator that makes us feel "good" at being non-communist.

Then some good can come out of this economic mess.




* I would have used the term whorehouse nations, but I feel
it would too much of an insult to such a time honoured
(although morally questionable) institutions.

   



bootlegga @ Mon Feb 09, 2009 2:47 pm

The comments at the bottom are pretty funny, with the America is great/Canada is socialist crowd on one side and some Canadians defending the article.

   



bootlegga @ Mon Feb 09, 2009 2:59 pm

GreenTiger GreenTiger:
It's hard to say at this point in time that this economic meltdown is good a lot of people are hurt and getting hurt.

However if it FINALLY gets us off our dead ass about getting off the dependency of foreign oil and start us thinking more "green".

If it starts to to get us to pay attention to who our friends really are especially Canada who we have so much in common with
and frankly we can take some moral perspectives on, rather than dealing with every * tin pot dictator that makes us feel "good" at being non-communist.

Then some good can come out of this economic mess.


Good point.

The "socialist" tag that US politicians apply to most of their allies really hurts the US in the long term.

   



sandorski @ Tue Feb 10, 2009 2:26 am

BartSimpson BartSimpson:
Personally, I think an economic meltdown will be good for the USA in the long run. As foreign manufacturing collapses due to the collapsing value of the dollar and the failure of overnight credit then US manuafacturing will have to come back (eventually) and it will create jobs in the USA. At the same time, our economic enemies such as China and India will face social upheaval as their newly flourishing middle classes refuse to quietly reassimilate into the ranks of the peasantry.

Yeah, there's more to why I think this will be good for the USA but it's too complex to write here and, as I've found on another site, people who are not Americans don't get my point anyway so there's not much use in posting the same stuff here. In short, a lot of the things Canadian and European liberals hate about the USA will turn out to be our strengths in these times.


China and India are here to stay. The US can't compete Internationally against them in the Goods they produce without really going backwards. You wouldn't be very pleased with how far back you'd need to go.

The US needs a whole new Industry/Technology. A new "PC" type game changing Technology that no one else has.

   



Bruce_the_vii @ Tue Feb 10, 2009 3:21 am

Anybody that thinks Canada's immigration system is great hasn't read up on it. We let in all these professionals with two degrees and they wind up driving cab.so much for that commentator.

   



Scape @ Tue Feb 10, 2009 6:49 am

No, he is stating skilled labour has more opportunity to get into Canada without the need of a green card requirement. Since skilled workers are still in high demand it places Canada in a better position. Intergration however is still an issue but that has more to do with the medical and educational communities then immigration.

   



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