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Canada is under constant pressure to remain competitive with the United States. If it does not then forces such as the brain drain will occur, where the top Canadians emigrate to the U.S. If Canada falls behind corporations will also leave for the United States. The U.S. has far less to fear as any losses to Canada can be easily managed.
Despite the contrasts listed below Canada and the United States are extremely similar economically. They are both developed countries and are thus vastly closer to each other than to the majority of the world's countries. Canada also is by almost all economic indices closer to the United States than it is to Europe.
Boom and bust cycles in Canada and the United States are closely linked as are many indices such as inflation and interest rates. Demographic patterns are also similar, with a slightly higher birth rate in the U.S. and a higher immigration rate in Canada.
In its quest to remain competitive Canada starts at an immediate disadvantage. Canada's harsh climate leads to high costs for such things as heating. Workers are less likely to immigrate to Canada and the wealthy are more likely to leave for tropical climates.
The climate of Canada also contributes to higher transportation costs as planes, trains, and automobiles are all more expensive to operate than in much of the United States. Canada's low population density also makes transportation costs higher. More of a historical concern was that much of the country lacks natural river systems that could be easily used for transportation. Canada's terrain is also somewhat more rugged than the United States. The Rocky Mountains are more of an obstacle, and the mass of the Canadian Shield provides a formidable barrier to any links between Ontario and Manitoba.
Canada does have some distinct geographic advantages. The large river systems in the north are sources of cheap hydro-electric power. While the United States has large supplies of natural resources, these are not enough to meet domestic demands and they are forced to important many raw materials, a great deal of which come from Canada. As a net exporter Canada thus benefits from increases in the price of resources, unlike the United States. For example a rise in oil prices generally causes a fall in the Dow Jones but an increase in the TSX.
Differences between governmentA government is an organization that has the power to make and enforce laws for a certain territory. There are several definitions on what exactly constitutes a government. The government has been defined as the dominant decision-making arm (the policy el intervention in the economies of the two countries is most closely examined in Canada, because many feel that policies that more closely emulate the U.S. are preferable, while others disagree.
The average tax rateA tax is an involuntary fee paid by individuals or businesses to a government. Taxes may be paid in cash or kind (although payments in kind may not always be allowed or classified as taxes in all systems). The means of taxation, and the uses to which the in Canada is higher than in the United States. In Canada total tax revenue for every level of government equals about 36.8% of GDP, in the U.S. this is closer to 30%. There is some regional variation, however. A resident of oil rich AlbertaAlberta is one of Canada's provinces. Its capital is the city of Edmonton. Other cities and towns include Banff, Calgary, Red Deer, Lethbridge and Medicine Hat. See also: List of communities in Alberta. As of 2004, the population of the province was 3,183 pays less in taxes than a resident of high tax MassachusettsMassachusetts is a state of the United States of America, part of the New England region. postal abbreviation is MA and its traditional abbreviation is Mass . It is properly called the Commonwealth of Massachusetts although there is no legal distinction b.
The taxes are applied differently as well. Canada's tax system is more heavily biased against the highest income earners, thus while Canada's tax rate is higher on average, the bottom fifty percent of the population is more lightly taxed than in the United States.
Canada also has a national sales taxA sales tax is a tax on consumption. It is normally a certain percentage that is added onto the price of a good or service that is purchased. Ideally a sales tax is charged exactly once on any one item. A conventional or retail sales tax attempts to achie of 7% on all purchases, while the U.S. federal government relies almost entirely on income taxIncome tax is a direct tax which is levied on the income of private individuals. Various income tax systems exist, ranging from a flat tax to an extensive progressive tax system. Tax levied on the income of companies is often called corporate income tax oes.
Canada has no inheritance tax while the United States still does, but the U.S. tax is currently scheduled to be abolished.