Stephen Marche at BloombergView notes
that a) the net worth of the average Canadian household in 2011 was
$363,202 vs. 319,970 for the average American household, b) Canada’s
unemployment rate is a full percentage point lower than America’s, and
c) Iceland is thinking about pegging its currency to the loonie rather
than the greenback. And then he draws this conclusion:
Since the 1990s, Canada has pursued a hardheaded (even
ruthless), fiscally conservative form of socialism. Its originator was
Paul Martin, who was finance minister for most of the ’90s, and served a
stint as prime minister from 2003 to 2006. Alone among finance
ministers in the Group of Eight nations, he “resisted the siren call of
deregulation,” in his words, and insisted that the banks tighten their
loan-loss and reserve requirements. He also made a courageous decision
not to allow Canadian banks to merge, even though their chief executives
claimed they would never be globally competitive unless they did. The
stability of Canadian banks and the concomitant stability in the housing
market provide the clearest explanation for why Canadians are richer
than Americans today.
Martin also slashed funding to social programs. He foresaw that
crippling deficits imperiled Canada’s education and health-care systems,
which even his Conservative predecessor, Brian Mulroney, described as a
“sacred trust.” He cut corporate taxes, too. Growth is required to pay
for social programs, and social programs that increase opportunity and
social integration are the best way to ensure growth over the long term.
Social programs and robust capitalism are not, as so many would have
you believe, inherently opposed propositions. Both are required for
meaningful national prosperity.
Yes, Canada has a nationalized health care system, but overall it
ranks as the 6th freest economy in the world, according to the Heritage
Foundation’s 2012 Index of Economic Freedom:
The foundations of economic freedom are very strong in
Canada, and the economy has emerged from the global economic slowdown
relatively unscathed. The rule of law is sustained by an effective and
independent court system, ensuring protection of property rights and the
equitable application of the commercial code.
Canada also performs well in other pillars of economic freedom and
continues to sharpen its long-term competitiveness. The soundness of
public finance has been notable, although government spending has been
rising as a share of GDP. Along with open-market policies that support
trade and dynamic investment, the efficient regulatory environment
facilitates entrepreneurial activity and provides a high degree of
certainty for business planning. The steady reduction of the standard
corporate tax rate over the past three years has also contributed to
Canada’s competitiveness.
There is also the fact that Canada has benefited from an energy boom.
It’s like one big North Dakota. Still, there seems little doubt that it
is a well-run nation. And can get away with a lot if marginal tax rates
are low, regulation efficient, debt contained — even a pretty big
social welfare state.
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