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#FinancialHistory #CanadaEconomy #CostOfLiving Why Canada Pays More (Because Competition Isn’t Allowed to Show Up) Canada looks like a competitive market until you follow the bills. This Financial History case file breaks down the five “protected” fortresses that quietly shape what you pay: banking, telecom, groceries, airlines, and freight rail. In this episode of Financial History, we map the real mechanism: legal moats, controlled scarcity, switching friction, and fee layers that keep prices sticky even when the public is furious. What you’ll learn: The “moat blueprint” (permission, scarcity, scale, place) How fees replace obvious price hikes (bags, data, admin, “value plans”) Why reform stalls (fragmented oversight + stability incentives) The narrow gates where competition can enter without breaking the system If you watch Financial History to understand why life gets more expensive without a single “villain,” subscribe for more forensic breakdowns. New episode soon more Financial History, fewer slogans. Disclaimer: For informational and entertainment purposes only. This is not financial advice, and I’m not your advisor. Any numbers, claims, or examples are based on publicly available online research and could be incomplete, inaccurate, or outdated. Always verify with reputable sources and speak with qualified professionals before acting on anything mentioned in this video. Use common sense and do not attempt risky or unsafe activities. If you’d like the source list, ask in the comments. I’m collecting everything for a central page. #Oligopoly #Monopoly #Telecom #Banking #GroceryPrices #AirCanada #FreightRail #CompetitionPolicy