- Reaction score
- 6,284
- Points
- 1,040
Doubled from an exceptionally low rate, and mortgage rates have been kept suppressed internationally for a long time to keep artificial growth in housing bubbles flowing and feed the stock market. 5-6% is painful compared to 2-3%, but still within the envelope of the conservative stress test limits on mortgages.
Our banking rules are generally really conservative, but means companies can't get massively over-leveraged with like has happened with the massive property developers in China which are basically collapsed and propped up by the government.
The BoC tool to control inflation is to adjust interest rates to encourage/limit spending. That doesn't work when inflation is driven by factors completely external to Canada. What exactly would you like them to do differently?
If we hadn't locked down and people were being stacked like cordwood in trailers there would be angry people. If we had done a lockdown without providing relief for people that lost income there would be pissed off people. Doing what we did to try and minimize avoidable deaths and ruin a lot of people still has people pissed off. There weren't really any good options, and we seem to have come through better off than others overall. Sure, some things probably could have been done better in retrospect, but I think governments at the federal, provincial and municipal levels did the best they could with what they knew at the time by listening to the experts instead of playing bullshit politics.
If they don't learn from this and prepare things better for the next pandemic, I'll be pissed off then, but it's a waste of effort to 'what if' this to death as I don't honestly think anyone competent would have done anything much differently.
The stats aren't apple to apple, but a little over a million people have died from COVID in the US to date, compared to about 43k in Canada, so if you want a comparison, they had about twice as many people die per capita as we did. Hardly sunny days, but still better than around 100k dead Canadians. Yeah, it's absolutely sucked, but has sucked less than it could have sucked to the tune of around 57k Canadians still on the sunny side of the grass.
Our banking rules are generally really conservative, but means companies can't get massively over-leveraged with like has happened with the massive property developers in China which are basically collapsed and propped up by the government.
The BoC tool to control inflation is to adjust interest rates to encourage/limit spending. That doesn't work when inflation is driven by factors completely external to Canada. What exactly would you like them to do differently?
If we hadn't locked down and people were being stacked like cordwood in trailers there would be angry people. If we had done a lockdown without providing relief for people that lost income there would be pissed off people. Doing what we did to try and minimize avoidable deaths and ruin a lot of people still has people pissed off. There weren't really any good options, and we seem to have come through better off than others overall. Sure, some things probably could have been done better in retrospect, but I think governments at the federal, provincial and municipal levels did the best they could with what they knew at the time by listening to the experts instead of playing bullshit politics.
If they don't learn from this and prepare things better for the next pandemic, I'll be pissed off then, but it's a waste of effort to 'what if' this to death as I don't honestly think anyone competent would have done anything much differently.
The stats aren't apple to apple, but a little over a million people have died from COVID in the US to date, compared to about 43k in Canada, so if you want a comparison, they had about twice as many people die per capita as we did. Hardly sunny days, but still better than around 100k dead Canadians. Yeah, it's absolutely sucked, but has sucked less than it could have sucked to the tune of around 57k Canadians still on the sunny side of the grass.