Why a ceasefire won’t lower your grocery bill
A drop in the price of oil won’t undo the damage. Add in the federal industrial carbon tax hike and affordable food may be a thing of the past
A drop in the price of oil won’t undo the damage. Add in the federal industrial carbon tax hike and affordable food may be a thing of the past
Food inflation is driven less by climate change and more by interprovincial trade barriers, taxes and regulatory costs
It’s fixing a problem Parliament created and you’ll end up paying for
Shoppers are dropping U.S. goods, but interprovincial trade barriers are still preventing Canadian firms from competing at scale
The expanded GST credit offers short-term relief but not lasting food affordability
A web of regulations, compliance costs, carbon pricing and interprovincial trade barriers is quietly pushing food prices higher
Carney says he cut taxes, so why are Canadians paying more?
Trump is forcing the Canadian government to confront what it has long avoided: an end to supply management
New script, same playbook. Nothing in the Carney budget breaks from the Trudeau years
Forecasts crumble the moment Canadians respond to rising costs or policy shifts
Canadians are feeling the pinch as Ottawa’s trade blunders and a weak dollar drive grocery bills higher
We need to rethink how we use public dollars before the damage becomes irreversible
Bureaucracy and bad policy, not demand, are driving up housing prices