Thread Starter.
Let me CORRECT YOU!
We have a bit over 35 million people.
United States population:
population, ... the United States of America is 325,642,556 as of Thursday, February 23, 2017, ...
Canada Area: 9.985 million kmยฒ
United States Area: 9.834 million kmยฒ
9.25 times Canadian payers to stock or supply 'needs/wants of almost the same area. That is, don't discount all of the supplying for that area with small population.
It's called, in order to buy at world market prices, the individual Canadian MUST pay more than the USA resident.
What I'd also like to be able to get statistics for is the number of kilometers of roads in Canada. I can easily think this way. I've had 3 travel jobs and on a personal scale I've driven from The Maritimes to Skagway, AK and back in about 2 months. Something over 18,000 km that trip.
When you let yourself change your perspective like that, I'm sure you will see how your analysis is flawed and why.
& to really whack you over the analytical head, the exchange rate for Canada vs. other world currencies change ALL THE TIME. I use
Bank of Canada as my reference for major currency rate changes. Pretty authoritative that site, eh?!!! To go and say some one was wrong with their Exchange rate a week or so ago, forget it. It's not wrong, it just changed as it does all the time.
& may I suggest that you come up and live in Canada for a year. In that time you can live in a different political space each month.....all 10 provinces and the 2 territories with roads. Or, lets add another factor. I think maybe 1/3 of those places of residence should be in more distant spots......Fort McMurray, AB, Wawa, ON, and Sydney, NS. Picking more central spots per political unit should be easy....except I will suggest Whitehorse, YT, Hay River, NWT just thinking of linkage roads. You can still select St. John's, NL, Charlottetown, PEI, Saint John, NB, Quebec City, QC, Winnepeg, MN, Saskatoon, SK, Vancouver, BC for your strongest comparisons with US places. I'm just trying to give you a bit of reality for the experience.
So, please take your head out of US approach/experience only.
Then go over and compare continental Europe, diverse African, Asian, South American and Australian places to work and live. "Needlessly expensive" is an irrelevant concept.
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