Not the cause. But he did offer up a message that he could improve things. And I think his policies are decidedly short term. All those cash payments to families are great in the short term. But does nothing to improve productivity and eventually quality of life down the road.
Part of it is the decimation of manufacturing. And a good chunk of it is the fact that successive governments at the federal and provincial level always take the easy way out and focus on real estate and resource extraction. There's no core economic strength in Canada today beyond these sectors. And any other sector that is doing well (eg. finance) is reliant on these two sectors.
Instead of working to build a high skilled, high wage economy, we built a moderate productivity, moderate wage economy, on the backs of real estate and resource extraction. And as the commodities supercycle hits the skids, the flaw in this plan is going to become obvious.
https://www.theglobeandmail.com/bus...-canada-faces-a-serious-productivity-problem/
https://ottawacitizen.com/opinion/c...trump-canadas-still-lags-in-advanced-industry
https://business.financialpost.com/...oductivity-blaming-tax-burden-and-regulations
Had Trudeau actually done what he pledged to do (invested in infrastructure massively) and pushed forward a rethink on training and education, we would have had a chance. The 2020s are going to be miserable for Canada. Especially if those predictions on EVs taking off come true.
There's a lot that could be done nationally though. Where's our investment in strategic infrastructure like a national smart grid or HSR in the Corridor and Southern Alberta? That would have improved connectivity and by extension productivity. Where's our education and training revamp and national HR strategy? Where's the 100% write offs for businesses that reinvest in people and plant? Why do we have 10 different carbon pricing plans instead of a single national carbon tax? All these things shape our national employment scene. And this government, like the last one has just ignored everything in favour of handing out cash. Harper did that with tax cuts. Trudeau does it with direct deposit.
In a time period where we need real coherent strategic vision, we get leaders who can't think beyond bribing voters. Perhaps that's the fault of voters. But it will come back to bite us in the six in a few years.