I really don’t care about this, I’m more concerned about SP inflation.
Inflation lowers all the boats and raises all the prices.
I really don’t care about this, I’m more concerned about SP inflation.
I would say Chrétien was the winner. He was the one who righted our finances. Martin just carried on what was established before him, as did Harper until the recession tanked us.And we have a winner. Paul Martin.
Justin's financial record follows that of daddy.
His numbers do look good actually.I would say Chrétien was the winner. He was the one who righted our finances. Martin just carried on what was established before him, as did Harper until the recession tanked us.
The alternative in Baby Scheer and Error O'Toole would not have been any better whatsoever. Canada are doing better than their trading partners USA and Mexico in that respect!!Who you vote for has consequences. Who woulda thunk it. Drama teachers in public office = bad for the economy.
We had a nice holiday for two years, printed literal tons of money and now we're due a payment.Putting people out of work for 2 years and disrupting worldwide supply chains has that effect.
House prices were ridiculously low then. My parents had the same: a mortgage back when interest was around 14.50% (your dad was very unlucky to hit that "sweet" spot of 20%). But their house cost just $62,000. Accounting for inflation, that'd be about $187,240 today. Except that very same house just went for $436,000 two months ago. Don't get me wrong, those high interest rates would still very much suck, but it's not so much better now in terms of interest payments, plus the cost of living in so many different areas has exploded.That last mortgage my Dad had on his home was like 20% interest.
We're still lucky.
Cannot imagine what that was like.
Like previous person said, the home prices when your dad had the 20% mortgage interest was perhaps $55,000. So with the low home prices and high interest rates at that time, the borrowers including your dad were still able to manage the mortgage payments.That last mortgage my Dad had on his home was like 20% interest.
We're still lucky.
Cannot imagine what that was like.