by MrBill » Fri 14 Sep 2007, 03:49:06
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('zoidberg', 'I')'ve always figured that since the vast majority of our exports head south to the US, a conspicuous drop in US consumption would drag down the Canadian economy as well. Some sectors that have ready export markets elsewhere(like oil producers) probably wouldn't notice, but they're not the whole story.
Quite frankly it would be unlike the greedy Albertans to willingly spread that oil wealth around.(It was different story when they were more dependent on an agricultural economy). So my thought is a sudden US downturn, would strongly effect some areas more than others.
I wouldnt mind having a few maple leafs from the mint lying around.
Greedy Albertans? What an idiotic remark.
First of all they were balancing their books and getting their financial house in order well in advance of this move higher in oil prices. So much so that they actually got caught short basic infrastructure when the boom hit as they had been still cutting back to save money and pay down debt.
Secondly, Alberta has always paid more to the Federal government than they have received in transfer payments. No other Province except Ontario can make that claim.
Thirdly, oil & gas revenue is shared both Provincially and Federally, so the Federal government gets its cut up front. As well Albertans also pay taxes and GST on everything they consume, so that money automatically goes to Federal coffers in Ottawa to be shared with Eastern creeps and bums.
Except those of course that are now working in Alberta and earning good money because their own Provinces cannot and will not get their own financial houses in order. Too bad for them. If they were even half smart they would join the Alberta/BC free trade zone and start supplying Alberta with the capital goods to support their economic boom.
Refering to your agriculture comment, you obviously have zero idea about anything connected to agriculture. It has been the refusal of the Federal government to end the CWB's monopoly on the sale and export of wheat, oats and barley that has crippled western agriculture on the Prairies for decades now. Finally, finally, the ban on the free choice of producers to market their barley and oats as they see fit means that Alberta farmers can now choose whether to export their grain or keep it locally to feed cattle. Wheat is still covered by the CWB's monopoly, unlike in eastern Canada where in Ontario and Quebec producers are free to market their own grain.
As Pierre Trudeau so eloquently put it, "why should I sell your grain for you?" as he gave western farmers the one finger salute. Well, to put it simply, because the CWB has a monopoly! Doh!
I cannot believe you are so ignorant of your own country?
As for Canada's monetary policies, to get back on topic, as we ship fully 80-85% of everything we produce to America we are, of course, closely tied to their economic fortunes.
The Canadian dollar is likely to rise viz a vie the US dollar because the Federal government and many of the Provinces are running balanced budgets, so we do not have the same strains on our finances as the USA does.
However, this is a mixed blessing as the stronger Canadian dollar is making manufactured goods to the USA more expensive. I would argue for more inter-Provincial trade and expanding into markets like the EU where the strong euro is more attractive to Canadian exports. But I realize it takes time to adust to a stronger currency, by improvements in technology and worker productivity, and you simply cannot ignore a market of 300 million inhabitants right on your doorstep - with direct rail links no less - either!
Never the less a weaker Canadian dollar is not the solution. This would just fan inflation. And at the end of the day only increases in productivity are sustainable not currency devaluation to be competitive. This is a lesson the Germans and Swiss have learned versus the French and Italians who have not within the eurozone (yes, I know Switzerland has the franc and not the euro, but their high value exports have to compete within eurozone markets). So for Canadian manufacturing it is compete or die just like in the UK where a strong pound has basically decimated their manufacturing and export base.
You will still get your highest payback from paying down unnecessary personal debt. Your student loan is a sunk cost. Every penny you waste on interest is gone forever and comes out of your lifetime earnings.
Your house will not appreciate faster just because you have a mortgage. Again any interest you pay on your house is gone forever. On a $150.000 mortgage at 6% over 25 years your payment will be approximately $1000 per month or $300.000 over the life of the loan. You pay as much extra interest as principle. This effectively doubles the price of your house, decreasing your profit if and when you need to sell. Also, as the interest is not tax deductible as in the USA, there is not tax benefit to running a mortgage either. It has to be repaid with after tax dollars. And as your take home pay net of all clawbacks in probably only around 50% of your gross pay cheque this means you need $600.000 in income to pay for your $150.000 house. You can deduct that amount from your lifetime earnings as well.
I would not recommend gold over any other asset. Yes, it is a hedge against inflation, but so are other physical assets. And gold is not an income earning asset. If you think the stock market is expensive at a P/E ratio of 16 then how do you value a purchase of gold? $700 an ounce upfront. If real inflation, as opposed to US dollar devaluation, is 3% per year then your payback period on that $700 is a P/E of 24 years. In the meantime you might have bought mining stocks that at least paid a dividend each year and would have risen along with gold's rise in price.
Of course, if you think that we are going to Hell in a handbasket then gold is a hedge against currency collapse when such an event might render stock certificates worthless, but I doubt it. I think you will do just as well with a currency hedge in place by buying stocks and bonds denominated in Canadian dollars, euros, Sterling and other currencies. My allocation to gold would be in the low single digits. But that is just my opinion.
I like the commodity and energy sphere and I do think that governments and central banks favor inflation over fiscal and monetary prudence. They seem to want to protect existing homeowners and speculators from their mistakes rather than protect pensioners, bond buyers, savers and renters. Why I do not know?
The organized state is a wonderful invention whereby everyone can live at someone else's expense.