Must we all get ready to move for jobs?
Perceptions by Gerry Warner
Remember the good ‘ol days when the siren call to the
young and ambitious was “Go West” or “Go North” for young men and women looking
for work and wanting to get ahead with their lives and careers.
Well, it’s not that way anymore, according to a CBC
story quoting the chief economist of the Bank of Montreal.
In a recent commentary, BMO chief economist Douglas
Porter said 100 per cent of the new jobs created in Canada last year were
created in only two cities, Vancouver and Toronto. "Yes,
that means the rest of the country has created precisely no new jobs
in the past year," Porter told the CBC.
Now, I don’t know exactly what the chief
economist means when he says all the new
jobs in the country were created in only two Canadian cities. Maybe he’s
speaking metaphorically in terms of the vast majority of job creation or only
counting whatever economists mean by “new” jobs. After all, there have been a
few new jobs created in Cranbrook and Kimberley the past year.
But who can deny that it’s a different world
out there now? There was a time when young people, and people of all ages for
that matter, living in rural Canada could pull up stakes and move to the Big
City whether for jobs, lifestyle or just because they got tired with the charms
of small town life.
Not anymore!
Not when the average price of a detached house
in Vancouver soared to $1.4 million this year and for that you may only get a 100-year-old
“handyman’s special” on the east side or a 500 sq. ft. new “laneway cottage” in
a west side alley. Who in affordable communities like Cranbrook and Kimberley
would put up with that? But if you lose your job you might have to consider it
because most new jobs are being created in the big cities where housing costs
are in the stratosphere. And it’s not just Vancouver and Toronto.
CMHC said in its quarterly market assessment
this week Canada’s 15 largest housing markets show signs of “over valuation.”
In other words, we have 15 housing bubbles growing in this country and we all
know where this eventually leads.
Poof!
So what’s a working stiff supposed to do to
survive or just keep up with the Joneses? Well if they’re young, the standard
advice is to get a college degree. But this often means resorting to the “bank
of mom and dad” who may be strapped themselves. If they’re older they can cash
in on the equity they’ve built up in their homes, but if they still have their
children’s educational aspirations to support they won’t be selling their houses
anytime soon.
Increasingly the picture unfolding appears to
be those of us over 65 will moulder away right where we are in quaint, charming
and affordable small town Canada while the young’uns run off to the big cities
where the lights are brighter and jobs more plentiful. In fact, look around
you, it’s already happening. In the 20 years, I’ve lived in Cranbrook and
Kimberley, the population of both communities has barely changed. Cranbrook has
held solid around the 20,000 mark while Kimberley has done the same at 6,700 despite
losing its largest employer.
I saw this phenomena when I walked the El
Camino Santiago in Spain a few years ago and passed through many dusty,
deserted villages where goats often outnumbered the few wizened Spanish seniors
left while cities like Madrid and Barcelona seethed with millions of people.
It’s the way of the modern world. The rural
areas are withering on the vine while the big metro areas are growing like
weeds evolving into mega-city-states and taking over the whole economy. And
what this means for Canada in the future is surely obvious.
At some point in the future every Canadian will
live in either Vancouver or Toronto. Oh, rue the day!
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