Unemployment was extremely high in Canada long after the "end" of the recession (ie after the economy actually stopped shrinking). In fact one of KIm Campell's biggest blunders in the 1993 election was to tell Canadaians that unemployment would not return to its pre recession (1990) levels for many years after that . She was rewarded with two seats for this, neither of which was her own. You originally said that the GST was introduced to raise revenue. It probably was, but MUldoon and the tories lied about it, just as they lied about everything else. Are you saying then, that this massive, extremely regressive tax increase DID NOT contribute to unemployment? I thought you right wingers thought that taxes inhibited, not stimulated the economy.
The slowdown in the US economy in the early 90's was much milder than here. The Governor of the Bank of Canada was appointed by Muldoon who would have, or should have fired him, if he did anything Muldoon wasn't completely happy with. Besides there is no reason to believe that Muldoon wasn't anything but pleased with the Bank's disastrous policies or that they were any different from his own. PS there wasn't any inflation to fight; the economy was prostrate. High interest rates if anything would have contibuted to inflation by vastly increasing the cost of borrowing. (also the deficit, but that's another story)
Since you haven't addressed any of my other points, I presume you accept them, or at least offer no defence: ie Muldoon vastly increased the debt and deficit; Muldoon and Harper acted chummy until the former's stink simply overwhelmed the latter's stomach; the Canadian people were hoodwinked by the tories about the GSt, etc , etc,.
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The massive debt actually started during WW 2, which, guess what ?, ushered in the greatest period of prosperity in the history of the western world. ( that debt also resulted in a remarkable achievement, the defeat of naziism... do you think it was worth it?) The great and the good (right wing division) struggled mightily to keep the debt low during that economic apogee known as the Great Depression . The tea partiers are Hoovers for our time; Harper is an R. B. Bennett for our time. (wait that's unfair- to Bennett!).
There is no evidence whatsoever for your last fabriucation that the GST or free trade helped Martin. He would have been helped far more by vastly more progessive income tax or a wealth tax. Are you in favour of those?