According to this, Canada's growing wealth isn't due to the tar sands, nor to 
industriousness, but to hard-headed socialism which allowed banks and housing 
market to stay stable and help weather the financial crisis. Now and then the 
Canadian media sounds warnings that the economy is about to crash, but hasn't 
happened so far. Maybe  the lack of Teapots here has something to do with it. 

Teapottery seems to be an exclusively American meme.


Canadians, on Average, Now Richer Than Americans
By Elizabeth Hewitt | Posted Tuesday, July 17, 2012, at 12:12 PM ET

Economic times here in America are pretty tough, but things aren’t so shabby 
for our neighbors to the north.
Over the past five years, the net worth of the average Canadian has crept up, 
overtaking the average American’s wealth for the first time. These days, 
Canadian households are about $40,000 richer than American ones.

The figures from Environics Analytics WealthScapes, first published in 
Toronto’s Globe and Mail last month, place the net value of the typical 
Canadian household at $363,202 versus $319,970 below the border. And, writer 
Michael Adams points out, "these are not 60-cent-dollars, but Canadian dollars 
more or less at par with the U.S. greenback.”

Not only are Canadians richer, Bloomberg View columnist Stephen Marche reported 
on Sunday, they're also more likely to have a job. According to the latest 
figures, Canada’s unemployment rate continues to sink down to 7.2 percent while 
the U.S. has held steady at 8.2 percent.

What's behind the economic success of the Great White North? It’s not 
necessarily that Canadians are more industrious and thrifty than their 
neighbors to the south. The 2008 economic crisis wreaked havoc on the U.S. 
housing market, sending real estate values plunging. So, Canadians’ houses are 
worth about $140,000 more than Americans. Canadians also own about twice as 
much real estate as Americans, and have fewer mortgages.

On a national level, assets like the Alberta tar sands certainly help, but, 
Marche proposes, it was a policy of "hard-headed socialism" that allowed the 
banks and the housing market to stay stable and weather the global economic 
crisis.
A sign of America’s failing system? Perhaps, Marche muses. Iceland, considering 
abandoning its current currency the krona, has taken note of Canada’s recent 
success and set its sights on the loonie.

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