Blog /
Economic Rewind: A Decade in Review
Economic Rewind: A Decade in Review
Are you ready to rewind to the start of 2010? A time where your radio boasted the Black Eyed Peas...
![](https://chamber.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/01/Economic-Rewind-A-Decade-in-Review.png)
Are you ready to rewind to the start of 2010? A time where your radio boasted the Black Eyed Peas and boot cut jeans were fashionable. While this may sound like a dystopian past, it really wasn’t. The start of this decade was actually a sign of hope for Canadians as we weathered the financial crisis better than our G7 peers, and the economy started to rebound.
So how has our economy has faired over the last decade and what’s in store in 2020? Find out in this edition of 5 Minutes for Business.
Related News
![](https://chamber.ca/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/20220218-robin-committee-768x474.png)
Time to put reports into action, Chamber tells House Agriculture Committee
On February 17, 2022 the Canadian Chamber’s Senior Director, Transportation, Infrastructure & Regulatory Policy, Robin Guy, appeared at the House...
![](https://chamber.ca/wp-content/uploads/2022/08/iStock-1327653874-768x474.jpg)
2022 Q3 Canadian Survey on Business Conditions: Inflation is the top issue. Labour pains intensifying, but price pressures and supply chains issues are improving
According to the latest CSBC survey, Canadian businesses continue to see inflation as their biggest near-term obstacle. A whopping 60% of firms expect inflation to be a challenge, the highest response rate in the history of the survey.
![](https://chamber.ca/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/Small-business-owner-doing-admin-work-768x474.jpg)
Canadian GDP for July: Defying expectations, a stronger start to the third quarter than anticipated, but a slowdown remains in clear sight
The writing has been on the wall for Canada’s real GDP as slowdown has been underway in the third quarter with falling housing prices and three consecutive months of job losses. July’s data gave Canadians slight reprieve with a surprising real GDP edging growth of 0.1%.