Government grocery stores sound good until you do the math
Thin margins make big savings impossible. When government steps in, costs don’t fall. They shift to taxpayers
Thin margins make big savings impossible. When government steps in, costs don’t fall. They shift to taxpayers
Some Canadians are relying on debt to manage the high cost of food
You pay £10 to see Karl Marx at Highgate Cemetary, but Adam Smith’s grave is free. The irony is hard to ignore
The last province known for fiscal discipline is now spending like Ottawa
Democracy doesn’t disappear. Citizens just stop showing up and government is left to the elites
Higher industrial energy costs are driving up prices, cutting investment and weakening the very sectors Canada depends on for growth
A political dispute could put both the power supply and billions in provincial revenue at risk
The consumer carbon tax is gone but industrial carbon pricing isn’t. You pay it every time you buy food
No matter the party, governments run deficits because spending wins votes
The world knows otherwise. Canada has the oil but years of political obstruction keep it from reaching markets
Entrepreneurs don’t wait for permission. They see a problem and start fixing it
The record of foreign intervention is bleak. Political change lasts only when it is driven by the people who live there
The rise of the pajama grocery run reflects how inflation and convenience are changing consumer shopping behaviour