"That's What Will Happen If Canada Stays On This Path" - Jordan Peterson
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I've been tracking
economic statistics in relationship to
Canada and sort of left me open-mouthed
in amazement at our dismal condition.
So, from what I've been able to
understand, the richest people per
capita in terms of GDP per person,
um, gross domestic product per person,
so that's total productivity, is
Ontario.
And, uh,
Ontario inhabitants are now poorer per
capita than inhabitants of Mississippi,
and that's the poorest American state.
So, the inhabitants of Canada's richest
province are poorer than the inhabitants
of the United States' poorest state, and
that's actually occurred
primarily
in the last 10 years.
>> Yes. And
because we were basically at parity
before that. Yes.
>> And had historically been not quite as
rich as the Americans with some, you
know, blips above them, but pretty much
tracking them one-to-one. And now it's
60% something like that. And that's And
that's not all the bad news because it's
60% in terms of
absolute wealth and a real estate market
that's twice as expensive approximately
on average.
>> Yeah. Right. So, now and
>> bad. It's really incredible. Like 10
years ago, the New York Times wrote an
article,
"Welcome to Canada, we're home of the
world's most affluent middle class." And
in that article, the Times had
calculated that median American and
Canadian incomes were tied, and that
Canadians were slightly better off. And
now part of that was because of the '09
'08 '09 financial crisis hit them harder
than it hit us, but still
now per capita GDP in the states is
$22,000
higher than in Canada
measured in USD. So, that's about almost
30,000 measured in
>> Right. So, that's a whole other income
essentially. That's a whole other
part-time income.
>> Exactly. And, um,
and then as you correctly point out,
their real estate is significantly
cheaper than ours. So, their their
dollars go a lot further even when you
match up the exchange rates. Um, and
what's worse than that is that the
leading indicators are even more
horrific. And leading indicators, for
example, are investment dollars because
your wealth tomorrow is determined by
your investment today. So, if your
employer, for example, is buying lots of
new tools and technology, you're going
to be able to crank out more widgets.
Um, so you crank out those widgets, then
you can ultimately make more income down
the road.
If you take business investment and
divide it by the number of workers, the
American worker gets $28,000
of investment measured in US dollars.
This is per capita? Per worker.
>> Per worker. Per member of the labor
force. So, you take the total business
investment of the United States divided
by the total number workers in America
is 28 grand. In Canada, it's 15 grand.
So, we got a the Canadian worker gets
about 55 cents
for every dollar of his American and
they're both measured in USD. So,
how is the Canadian worker
>> in future productivity?
>> That's investment in, um,
in machines and technology, and
warehouses, factories,
um,
>> I see. any any capital investment that
businesses make divided by the number of
workers. That's the measurement. So, now
that means they're getting better
technology, better, um,
new machines, uh, better tools than our
workers, and they will be able to crank
out even greater wages for their people
than we will unless we catch up with
that.
Um, our productivity is another major
problem. Like right now,
and that's productivity sounds
complicated, it's actually extremely
simple. You just take the GDP and you
divide it by the hours worked in the
country.
So, American GDP is $80. So, for every
hour an American worker works on
average, he he or she produces $80 of
GDP of GDP. Mhm. In Canada, it's 50.
So, that's every hour. So, that means we
have to work 60% more just to make the
same amount uh, and have the same level
of, uh, income to buy food and housing.
So, that that's the Now, that sounds
like a bunch of wonk speak that should
only might seem like it it only matters
to someone staring at a spreadsheet or a
graph or a chart, but in fact, that's
reflected in the fact that our 2 million
people are lined up at food banks cuz
they can't afford food, and
80% of youth can't afford homes, and,
um, our quality of life is and the
things we can afford to provide our kids
have fallen back so much. There's real
real life.
>> and easily comprehensible statistic. I
mean, if you work and you produce $80
worth of goods and services in an hour
compared to working and producing 50,
obviously that's a substantial
shortfall.
>> Yeah. So, and is that Is there a starker
indicator of the economic disparity
between the US and Canada than that? Or
do you think that's the primary
statistic?
I mean, I think housing costs are
another one. I mean, there was a study
out just, uh,
10 days ago that has Toronto and
Vancouver now by far the most
unaffordable housing markets in North
America.
And so, you know, housing costs are
50% higher in Toronto than they are in
Chicago, even though Chicago workers
make 50% more money.
Uh, the same is true between Vancouver
and Seattle. Seattle workers make way
more than Vancouver workers,
but housing is 60 or 70% more expensive
in Vancouver. So, uh, on on all of the
measures
>> by a lot. Yeah. By a lot. By a lot.
>> Yeah.
>> And we're And we're paying more.
>> more by a lot. Right. And most of that's
transpired in the last 10 years.
>> Yes. And we're paying the difference by
accumulating enormous quantities of
debt. Our our households are by far the
most indebted in the G7. Uh, when you
take you divide total household debt by
GDP, we now have a bigger stock of of
household debt than our entire economy.
Um, we are more indebted as households
than the Americans were right before the
'08 financial crisis.
Yes. And, um,
so what we have as a model in Canada is
we have artificial scarcity imposed by
very heavy and restrictive state,
confiscatory state. So, that suppresses
production. Mhm.
But in order to allow for consumption,
we print money and borrow money, and
then flood the economy with that money.
>> Okay. So, that's another problem. So,
that's the inflationary problem. Now,
the problem with inflation Just many
problems with inflation, but one of them
is that it particularly punishes people
who are thrifty and who save.
>> Yes. Right. Right. So, inflation
punishes the people who forego
gratification to invest in the future.
That's right.
>> Right. So, that's a very bad idea.
>> It's a horrible I Inflation is the
single most in immoral tax for so many
reasons. One, it takes from savers and
people who are trying to be be
responsible, thus making it impossible
to be responsible because you will If
you If you refuse to to play the
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