This article is from October of last year.
I will post a few more like these which chronicle the economic tide as we approach & then begin the new year.
Let's see if the stories get brighter or bleaker shall we?
Well now, that was then - October, 2008 -
Anybody think we are doing better than they predicted?
Let's look at the past resessions & depressions here in Canada:
"...an echo of the Wall Street stock market crash..."
As Canada has always done we FOLLOWED the US in their economic downturn.
As the old saying goes;
"When America coughs & sneezes, the rest of the world gets a cold"
"... unprecedented economic struggle"

I will post a few more like these which chronicle the economic tide as we approach & then begin the new year.
Let's see if the stories get brighter or bleaker shall we?
Economists say Canada is headed towards an unprecedented economic struggle
By David Friend, THE CANADIAN PRESS
TORONTO - Economists say Canada is headed for one of the toughest economic periods in recent memory, as job losses climb and energy prices tumble, but it's hard to tell just how bad it might get over the next year and a half.
Making it hard to predict, says TD Bank (TSX:TD) chief economist Don Drummond, is that the current economic crisis hasn't followed historical trends so far.
"The starting point doesn't have any comparisons, that's the difficulty," he said Tuesday.
"You try to find a similar period in history and look at the conditions that will match that. But what do you do when you've never been here in history?"
Drummond says today's trouble is unlike the Great Depression, the Japanese banking problems of the 1990s or any other major periods of stock market turmoil.
Other economists pointed out that by definition we aren't necessarily in a recession, which is technically described as two or more consecutive quarters of economic contraction. Once a recession starts, it generally lasts 18 months to two years.
"A recession doesn't necessarily mean that old traditional definition," said Doug Porter, chief economist at the Bank of Montreal (TSX:BMO).
"Officially we don't have two back-to-back quarters of negative GDP in our forecasts, but that doesn't completely exempt Canada from being in a recession."
The most recent recession to rip through Canada happened in the early 1990s, an echo of the Wall Street stock market crash of 1987 and more directly caused by the pop of the real estate bubble.
Canada's jobless rate soared to 10 per cent in 1991 and 1992, the economy shrank and consumers tightened their spending at the same time as the retail sector adjusted to a new consumption tax - the GST.
In the recession of the early 1980s - the worst in the post Second World War era - the jobless rate peaked at 13 per cent. The Great Depression of the 1930s lasted about eight years and was accompanied by unemployment of more than 20 per cent.
The latest job numbers for September will be released Friday by Statistics Canada, and they're still expected to show growth in the economy.
Economists are estimating an average of about 12,500 new jobs in September, which is still considered modest job growth but is down slightly from the 15,200 jobs created in August.
Canada's jobless rate is currently 6.1 per cent, close to its lowest level in 30 years, though economists expect it to rise to 6.2 per cent for September.
The downturn in the United States could quickly obliterate Canada's gains as U.S. employers slash payrolls at an alarming rate.
Canadian Auto Workers economist Jim Stanford is betting on that darker times lie ahead, predicting that Canada will be in a full-blown recession by the end of this year.
He bases his pessimistic outlook on plummeting oil prices, which have descended from a record-high above US$150 a barrel to about US$90 on Tuesday.
"Our economy has been very reliant over the last five years on the commodities bubble," he said.
"If anything, the downturn in Canada could be worse because on top of the financial uncertainty, we had invested so many eggs in the resource basket. Now that the commodity bubble has popped, we're going to feel that pain on top of the general financial uncertainty that everyone is grappling with."
While energy prices are off from their recent highs, a barrel of crude oil is still about US$10 more than it was a year ago, a sign that the price declines haven't fully eroded growth.
Furthermore, the manufacturing sector in Central Canada is going to wallow in its existing problems for several years and will likely see more job cuts - up to another 100,000 - within the next year, Stanford predicted.
"Our manufacturing sector has been decimated and many of those jobs aren't coming back," he said.
BMO Capital Markets chief economist Sherry Cooper expects changes to consumer spending habits, starting in the United States where lending from banks will be much tighter.
"Households will be forced to save the old-fashioned way, by spending less than they earn," she wrote in a research note.
Cooper says the U.S. banking industry will end the credit crisis with fewer financial firms, tougher regulations and less money to lend.
Less spending means that Americans will think twice about how they use their paycheque, which could mean cancelling those gas guzzling road trips, less impulse purchases of Canadian goods, and fewer home renovations.
As a result, Canada's lumber, manufacturing and oil sands are all potential targets for further market erosion.
And the longer the turmoil goes on, the more serious the hit will be to consumer confidence, suggested Porter.
"If you begin to get further weakness in employment that's what's really going to weigh in on consumer spending," he said.
"To some extent, the Canadian consumer has led a charmed life over the last few years between low interest rates, strong job growth and the falling price for a lot of big ticket items."
"It's tough to build a bullish case at this point."
The shift in overall economic sentiment is a far cry from where economists were a year ago, when they expressed confidence that the U.S. subprime mortgage debacle's influence on credit markets was easing and wouldn't bleed into the Canadian economy.
Last October, the Conference Board of Canada predicted that the U.S. housing crisis would stretch at least into the autumn of 2008, but that neither the U.S. nor Canada would be slammed by a recession.
CIBC World Markets (TSX:CM) economists said the stock markets were showing signs that credit troubles were easing, while TD Bank expected the loonie to hold near parity well into this year.
Instead, markets are still being punished by the rippling effects of the credit crisis, and the loonie was sliding below parity with the U.S. dollar within weeks of the TD economist's prediction.
Drummond was part of the group that put their bets on a stronger dollar, and he said that with the rash gyrations in markets and commodities, it has been tough to find an estimate and hold to it.
"You go out with a weak baseline case, acknowledge to people very honestly that there's an extraordinary amount of uncertainty and you have to be prepared for the possibility of it being quite a bit worse," he said.
http://cnews.canoe.ca/CNEWS/Canada/2008/10/07/7007346-cp.html
Well now, that was then - October, 2008 -
Anybody think we are doing better than they predicted?
Let's look at the past resessions & depressions here in Canada:
Anybody catch what he stated?The most recent recession to rip through Canada happened in the early 1990s, an echo of the Wall Street stock market crash of 1987 and more directly caused by the pop of the real estate bubble.
Canada's jobless rate soared to 10 per cent in 1991 and 1992, the economy shrank and consumers tightened their spending at the same time as the retail sector adjusted to a new consumption tax - the GST.
"...an echo of the Wall Street stock market crash..."
As Canada has always done we FOLLOWED the US in their economic downturn.
As the old saying goes;
"When America coughs & sneezes, the rest of the world gets a cold"
Any bets on how high our unemployment will get in this;In the recession of the early 1980s - the worst in the post Second World War era - the jobless rate peaked at 13 per cent. The Great Depression of the 1930s lasted about eight years and was accompanied by unemployment of more than 20 per cent.
"... unprecedented economic struggle"






