Last Spring I wrote a
series of articles
on Canada’s economic, social & political malaise. If you do an AI
search using the latter phrase, you’ll see the data. In those pieces I
contrasted the ‘Great White North’ with Singapore, that economic &
innovation powerhouse that I’ve come to know & love. I proposed a series of
countermeasures and a road map back to prosperity. Has anything changed since I
wrote those articles?
Things have indeed changed
since I
last wrote about Canada – they’ve gotten worse. Trade tensions with
the US have further degraded productivity, business investment, and our
standard of living. Trade barriers within Canada remain impenetrable. Our debt
& deficit continue to mushroom, and per capita GPD declines. We are
officially in a ‘technical’ recession.
Canada’s economic malaise
is bleeding into day-to-day life. Family formation & birth rates are at
historic lows. Kids can barely afford rent; home ownership is an impossible
dream. Violent crime & infant mortality rates are spiking. Healthcare? -
don’t ask. Even life expectancy is
falling.
There is strong
separatist sentiment in Western Canada and Quebec. Alberta will hold a
referendum on sovereignty this fall. As for Quebec, if the front-running Parti
Quebecois wins October’s provincial election, we’ll soon have a second
sovereignty referendum. Alberta & Quebecois separatism is fueled by the
strong sense that ‘we can do better outside of Canada’.
And yet, Canada
remains a ‘rich’ country. We are endowed with one of the planet’s most
magnificent & munificent land masses. We have pretty much everything
Singapore lacks. And unlike Singapore, our cities & infrastructure have
never been destroyed. Our people have never been imprisoned or enslaved. We are
not surrounded by enemies. We have never been invaded by a merciless imperial
army. We live next door to the world’s richest & most innovative market.
Singapore has become
a rich nation in a poor country. Is Canada becoming a ‘poor nation in a rich
country’? Anxious to deflect attention, our elites invoke the ‘ogre down
South’, but even that tactic is wearing thin.
Clearly, something
has gone badly wrong. Is Canada’s decline irreversible? What would it take to regain
our historic tenacity, self-confidence & entrepreneurial spirit? (I
provided a humble road map in my earlier articles.) I believe our PM is sincere
& capable and wish him well. His thankless challenge is to clean up a
decade of malfeasance and restore a once-great country.
I do not wish to be
misunderstood. This gives me no pleasure, and I have no partisan axe to grind.
Canada (and America) gave my family a chance at a better life. Am I not obliged
to signal the growing gap between my native land & the innovation powerhouses
I’m lucky enough to experience?
They say, the
‘darkest hour is right before the dawn’. Let’s hope so.
Best wishes,
Pascal Dennis, co-author of Harnessing Digital Disruption