Admiral Beez
Superstar
I suppose, but in 1991 my first year university tuition was $1,900 and $2,500 when I graduated in 1995 ($3,700 and $4,600 today). My first job in 1996 paid $35,000 ($63.4K today) from which I paid $700 a month ($1,268 today) for a one bedroom basement apartment on the Danforth. I was able afford a used car, travel internationally and contribute to my RSPs so as not to need to rely on CPP or OAS. In 1998, newly married my wife and I, on a combined income of about $85k ($150k today) bought a five bedroom semidetached home in downtown Toronto for $290k ($512k today). In 1998 when I married there were 30 million people in Canada, and the place definitely felt less crowded. Life just seemed more affordable and enjoyable during the Mulroney-Chrétien-Martin years.Actually, so many of the problems we have today is because of their can-kicking. They refused to raise CPP substantially to give us room to cut OAS today. Infrastructure and housing investment tanked on their watch.
I can’t think of many ways that Canada in 2024 is better than it was in 2004, by which we’d gained marriage equality and reproductive freedom, the Employment Equity Act was a decade old, and we had more wealth distribution and affordability. In 2004 I bought a four bedroom house in Fredericton, NB for $192k, equal to about 2x our pretax household income. Today’s young adults don’t get this opportunity because Harper, Trudeau, elites and idiot, self-serving premiers screwed up the country.
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