19 Canadian Expenses That Quietly Exploded Over the Past Year
Canadian household budgets rarely collapse from one dramatic bill. More often, the damage comes from ordinary costs that rise a
Canadian household budgets rarely collapse from one dramatic bill. More often, the damage comes from ordinary costs that rise a
Summer getaways often look affordable when the first number is small: a campsite fee, a cheap flight, a short ferry
Spring errands used to feel predictable: groceries, pharmacy runs, gardening supplies, sneakers for warmer weather, maybe a patio chair or
Everyday spending in Canada has changed from routine to reconsidered. Small purchases that once felt harmless now compete with higher
Alberta’s unity debate has moved from a provincial pressure campaign into a national political test. Pierre Poilievre’s decision to step
Ottawa’s latest pipeline push has turned a familiar Canadian argument into something sharper: not whether Alberta wants a new route
Canada’s prescription drug market just entered a new phase in the GLP-1 boom. After years of Ozempic dominating conversations around
Canada’s trade debate has stopped sounding abstract. When Prime Minister Mark Carney warned in Vancouver that the country has “fallen
A familiar trade fault line has reopened in Atlantic Canada. After the Canadian Food Inspection Agency confirmed potato wart in
A foreign interference story rarely begins with a dramatic headline. More often, it starts quietly: an online smear campaign, pressure
British Columbia has become the first major test of Prime Minister Mark Carney’s effort to reset Canada’s industrial carbon pricing
Canada’s best-known travel spots can feel completely different before peak summer fully arrives. The same lakes, boardwalks, beaches, historic streets,
Few farm products illustrate the fragility of Canada-U.S. trade quite like mushrooms. They are perishable, harvested year-round, and moved through
A quiet piece of Canada-U.S. security architecture has suddenly become a public symbol of strain between two longtime allies. Washington
For central bankers, patience is rarely passive. The Bank of Canada’s latest account of its April 29 deliberations shows a
The Gordie Howe International Bridge was supposed to symbolize something simple: a faster, more modern link between two economies that
Canada’s Arctic has moved from the edge of the national conversation to the centre of Ottawa’s security agenda. After repeated
Canada’s stock market suddenly looked a little less comfortable as oil, bonds, and inflation fears all moved in the wrong
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