As much as Canadians may hate it, they still are. The US leads the world in the following:
Largest Economy (Nominal GDP) at $27+ trillion GDP (bigger than the next few countries combined)
Global Reserve Currency Dominance. 58–60% of global reserves held in USD
Equity Market Size & Influence. U.S. stock markets are the largest in the world, with 60%+ of global equity market cap
Venture Capital & Startup Ecosystem. The U.S. attracts more VC funding than any other country
Labor Productivity (among large economies). Very high GDP per worker
Consumer Market Size. Largest high-income consumer market, Huge internal demand (less export-dependent than many countries)
Energy Production. The U.S. is the world’s largest oil and natural gas producer
Higher Education & Research Output. Leads in research funding (even in these Trumpian times) and Nobel Prizes
Largest High-Income Population. The U.S. has the largest population living at high income levels
Top destination for immigrants. Even in these Trump days, the US is home to over 50 million immigrants.
Not on GDP per capita and the other measures above they haven't.
Not that I think the US is all that, nor that the EU and China are not catching up (for example, China now leads in global patents), but we Canadians cannot smugly think that Trump's 2nd term is an indication that the US is in rapid decline.
I'm not for mindless bashing of the U.S. or excess conceit here, given that Canada has many shortcomings in need of addressing. Still, I have a distaste for one sided lists.
So, the U.S..also
Leads in prisoners per capita in the OECD at 542 per 100,000, that's 80'ish more than the next closest, which is Turkiye.
Is second only to Mexico in Homicide Rate among OECD countries at 5.7 per 100k, Canada is 1.9 for reference.
Is 9th from the bottom in Gini Coefficient (income inequality). of 45 ranked countries. Canada is 26th worst for reference.
Is 8 spots below the OECD median for life expectancy at 78.4; OECD median is 81.1, Canada is 81.7
Leads the OECD in unsheltered homelessness (at 76 per 100,000) drops to 4th from worst when measured those in shelters and on the street. (Canada is 24 per 100k)
Is #2 in the OECD for extreme poverty, at 18.1% of the population. (Canada is 12.2%)
From the World Economic Forum, the low literacy and numercy numbers aren't good either (though Canada's are nothing to brag about)
Ok, enough of that.
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But important to add, the economic indicators in the U.S. are misleading, in the sense that per capita GDP is not median income, and median income has to be adjusted to reflect what it buys you (purchasing power parity), and what you have to buy with it (out of pocket healthcare costs being the most obvious).
That's not to suggest the U.S. doesn't do many things well and that Canada and others couldn't do better. But we have to be wary of grass is greener stories as they are often misleading.
The other thing, of course, is that the U.S. is running up debt even faster than we are, and if at a any point the U.S. dollar falters as the reserve currency.......they will have a very large problem on their hands.