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Workers of the world are about to take their revenge. Owners of capital will have to make do with a shrinking slice of the cake. The powerful social forces that have flooded the global economy with abundant labour for the last four decades years are reversing suddenly, spelling the end of the deflationary super-cycle.

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North of the world’s largest economy sits Canada, a wealthy, peaceful, nation that is often overlooked in discussions of the global economy and financial markets.

It’s a country that policymakers and investors ignore at their peril.

Contrary to popular belief, Canada is far more than its relationship with the U.S. In many ways, the nation runs counter to many global trends – what Canada enjoys in abundance, much of the world lacks.

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“We are at a sharp inflexion point,” says Professor Charles Goodhart, a pillar of the London School of Economics and a former top official at the Bank of England.