Two decades ago Canada suffered a deep recession and teetered on the brink of a debt crisis caused by rising government spending. The Wall Street Journal said that growing debt was making Canada an "honorary member of the third world" with the "northern peso" as its currency. But Canada reversed course and cut spending, balanced its budget, and enacted various pro-market reforms. The economy boomed, unemployment plunged, and the formerly weak Canadian dollar soared to reach parity with the U.S. dollar.And Canada has ridden out this recent world wide economic slowdown very well. Go figure.
In some ways the United States is in even worse fiscal shape today than Canada was two decades ago. For one thing baby boomers are now retiring in droves, which is pushing the federal government deeper into debt every year. America risks becoming a "first world" country like those in Europe, where huge deficit spending is wrecking economies and ruining opportunities for young people.
America needs to get its fiscal house in order, and Canada has shown how to do it. Our northern neighbor still has a large welfare state, but there is a lot we can learn from its efforts to restrain the government and adopt market-oriented reforms to spur strong economic growth... Read the rest
It won't be easy to cut government spending.
First, there's the political problem. Legislators find it easy to buy voters with government spending that appears to help them. People easily perceive the spending that helps them personally, and fail to perceive the subtle negative effects that government spending have on the whole economy, by diverting resources, and preventing market efficiencies
Second, there are a lot of people directly and indirectly dependent on the government teat. To end that suddenly
Which do you prefer?
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