This may be what Trump is getting at...
The notion that the U.S. directly "subsidizes" Canada in economic, military, or trade terms is a bit of a misnomer, often stemming from political rhetoric rather than clear financial ledgers. There’s no line item in the U.S. budget labeled "Canada Subsidy," so we’re dealing with indirect benefits, cost-sharing arrangements, and strategic interdependence rather than explicit cash transfers. Let’s break it down by category based on available data and reasoning, keeping in mind the current date of March 13, 2025.
Economic Subsidies
The U.S. doesn’t provide direct economic subsidies to Canada in the form of grants or aid, as Canada is a high-income nation, not a developing country reliant on foreign assistance. Claims of massive economic subsidies—like Donald Trump’s varying figures of $100 billion, $200 billion, or even $250 billion annually—typically point to the U.S. trade deficit with Canada. In 2023, the U.S. goods and services trade deficit with Canada was $40.6 billion, per the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis. For goods alone, it was $72.3 billion. This deficit isn’t a subsidy—it’s the result of market transactions where the U.S. imports more (especially oil) than it exports. Canada’s cheap, secure energy exports (e.g., heavy crude) benefit U.S. consumers and refineries, keeping gas prices lower, but that’s trade, not a handout.
Some argue the U.S. indirectly "subsidizes" Canada by absorbing Canadian exports (e.g., $481.6 billion in 2023), boosting Canada’s economy. Yet, this is mutual—Canada imported $440.9 billion from the U.S., supporting American jobs. Economist Jim Stanford notes Canadian investors have lent $700 billion to the U.S. over the past decade at low interest, offsetting the trade deficit and yielding a net investment income deficit for Canada ($13 billion annually flows south). If anything, this suggests Canada subsidizes U.S. consumption, not vice versa. No credible data supports a direct economic subsidy beyond these dynamics, so the figure here is effectively $0 in explicit terms.
Military/Defense Subsidies
The U.S. doesn’t directly fund Canada’s military, but the idea of a subsidy arises from the U.S.’s outsized role in North American defense, particularly through NORAD. Estimates from X posts and web discussions peg U.S. NORAD spending at around $10 billion annually, with Canada contributing about $500 million. This $9.5 billion gap isn’t a subsidy to Canada—it’s the U.S. maintaining a system that protects its own airspace too, given threats like Russian bombers or missiles transiting the Arctic. The U.S. would likely incur these costs regardless, as Canada’s geography is a strategic buffer.
Canada spends $26.9 billion USD (2023, SIPRI) on its own military—1.3% of GDP, below NATO’s 2% target. Critics say this low spending means the U.S. "subsidizes" Canada’s defense by providing deterrence (e.g., against Russia or China) via its global $850 billion defense budget. But Canada’s 63,000 active troops and 20,000 reservists contribute to NORAD and NATO missions (e.g., Latvia), reducing U.S. burdens. Historical U.S. military purchases from Canada ($205 million vs. Canada’s $131 million over four years in the 1950s) show mutual investment, not one-way aid. A rough estimate of U.S. "extra" defense spending benefiting Canada might be $1-5 billion yearly (mainly NORAD-related), but this is strategic cost-sharing, not a subsidy in the traditional sense.
Trade Subsidies
Trade "subsidies" are often misconstrued as the U.S. tolerating unfavorable terms. The U.S.-Canada trade relationship, governed by the USMCA (successor to NAFTA), is largely balanced. Canada’s tariffs on some U.S. goods (e.g., dairy at over 200%) irk American producers, but the U.S. imposes its own barriers (e.g., softwood lumber duties). The trade deficit isn’t a subsidy—it reflects U.S. demand for Canadian oil, lumber, and autos, matched by Canada’s appetite for U.S. machinery, tech, and services. Posts on X claiming $91.7 billion or $300 billion in trade subsidies lack backing from official sources like TD Economics, which debunk such figures as misreadings of trade flows.
The U.S. spends $90-135 billion annually securing global trade routes (e.g., via naval presence), per some estimates, and Canada benefits as a trading nation. But this isn’t Canada-specific—it’s a global public good, with the U.S. as the biggest user of those routes. No direct trade subsidy exists; the benefit to Canada is incidental and unquantified in yearly terms.
Synthesis
Economic: $0 in direct subsidies; trade deficit ($40.6 billion in 2023) isn’t a cash transfer.
Military/Defense: $1-5 billion plausible as an indirect benefit (NORAD cost disparity), but it’s mutual defense, not a gift.
Trade: $0 in explicit subsidies; indirect benefits from U.S. global security spending are diffuse, not Canada-targeted.
Total "subsidy"? Maybe $1-5 billion at the high end, if you stretch the term to include defense cost disparities. Claims of $100-300 billion from political figures or X posts don’t hold up—they conflate trade deficits and strategic interdependence with outright payments. The U.S. and Canada lean on each other; it’s not a one-way street. Data’s fuzzy without a specific U.S. government breakdown (unlikely to exist), but the evidence points to minimal, if any, true subsidies.
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"You do nothing for the Jewish community. Why are you here?."
Canadians are tired of do nothing corrupt politicians. @oliviachow, the mayor of Toronto, was confronted by a brave Jewish lady while Chow was attempting a photo op for a Hanukkah celebration in Toronto. Olivia Chow failed Toronto as it’s now in the hands of jihadists. She did not keep Jewish owned businesses safe. She did not participate in the flag raising ceremony for the Israeli flag. She has refused to participate in any event condemning the October 7th terrorist attacks but she said it is okay if people celebrate October 7th. On all occasions, she has sided with the Jihadists. @MayorOliviaChow is no less disgusting than Justin Trudeau.
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