Second_in_pie
Senior Member
Yeah, that's the point. The US, which has previously adopted quite a laissez-faire stance on domestic issues, has the most developed economy in the world, which developed hugely (and many would say by far the most in it's history,) in those 50 or 60 years since WWII in which it's population doubled. Obviously, huge population growth doesn't necessarily mean the economy going belly up. A more extreme example, Israel's population grew about 5x in the 40 years after the state was created, yet has maintained a very high standard of living as a developed country.Well, the US has fewer obligations to its citizens than almost all other liberal democracies so it can, in theory, afford to grow faster. Even the US has for more institutions providing for its citizens than the developing world countries which are growing at alarming rates - and, by the way, the rate of growth you are suggesting eclipses the rate of every country in the world, developing or not.
It definitely would take a lot of work on the part of the government to manage everything. They'd basically need to plan out how the nation would turn out at the end of every year, to make sure that the economy remains stable and that people are able to live good lives. It'd be hard, but it definitely doesn't mean certain doom. Canadian politics would need to make a huge leap, but I think it's much, much more of a social issue in Canadian's trust of our government to do such things, rather than an actual issue of how the government will function.To account for the growth rates you are suggesting and maintain a social net that Canadians are used to, government would have to expand at an incredible rate. Since the people who organize bureaucratic institutions need to have an innate sense of how the country is run and its governance practices, we could only really have other long-established Canadians set up these kinds of institutions. Of course, in a rapidly growing country this becomes a supply issue, which means that government labour resources will be stretched extremely thinly and will never keep pace with the growth in population. The level of accountability that government has in situations like this begins to slide.
What do you think these towns would trade and sell? Grocers would sell food, clothes shops would sell clothes, electronics stores would sell electronics. It's quite a simple concept, really.Are you certain that there would be the creation of entirely new towns? 10,000 years of history has more or less dictated that massive influxes of people tend to settle in existing cities. This, of course, causes its own social problems. Also, what is your blueprint for creating these local economies? What would they trade and sell?
So are you suggesting a protectionist economy? As much as I think that globalization has caused its fair share of problems, how do you suggest that Canada pull out of the entrenched global economy and begin creating import-replacing jobs? Who would we sell our expensive, undifferentiated goods to? Whatever those goods are, we would have to sell a lot of them, because we have 70 million additional mouths to feed (and an extra million each year!)
I'm not suggesting a protectionist economy. I'm suggesting that Canada doesn't hand it's ass out to be the international bitch. We really are. We provide a huge amount of fuel for the manufacturing economies of the developed world, yet just end up paying higher prices for those manufactured goods. I'm not suggesting we be protectionist, just stop handing our wealth out on a silver plate to the benefit of others.
Or you could instead word that to "Second in Pie, you want Canada to be like the rest of the Western world, only on an economy based off of needs for the future and a population true to the idea of a cultural mosaic? If that's the case, yes I do.Second in Pie, you want to set up a protectionist nation of regional, import-replacing industries that's debt financed on the promise of explosive population growth (e.g. we won't worry about paying for a giant infrastructure project, because our 100 million children will inherit the debt in smaller chunks!)...and yet somehow this closed-off economy based on a relatively vague industry will take off and thrive in a global market?
PS. In the future, instead of making vague assertions of disapproval, perhaps provide either constructive criticism or fuel to the debate (eg. how will this work, why don't you do this, etc) I'd actually like to make structure out of this thread, with the intention of thinking up a viable alternative to Canada's future than the status quo.