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
A political dispute could put both the power supply and billions in provincial revenue at risk
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 rise of the pajama grocery run reflects how inflation and convenience are changing consumer shopping behaviour
Fees are climbing, debt is rising and results barely change. Ratepayers are paying more for a garbage system that shows little sign of improvement
Years of overspending have left Saskatchewan taxpayers paying hundreds of millions every year just to service the debt
A decade of stalled pipelines and limited export capacity leaves Canada unable to respond
Power demand rises, water use climbs and the jobs often disappear once the construction phase ends
Oil, diesel and fertilizer prices are already climbing. Food prices tend to follow
Energy abundance is economic and geopolitical leverage
Without small modular reactors powering remote projects, Canada’s vast resources will stay in the ground
Investors follow returns. When productivity lags and taxes bite, money finds a better home