English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

10 answers

same reason as why as soon as you go into Canada
the temperature goes from 32 degrees.. immediately drops to zero
it is how the border was decided..
the immediate temperature change.
and the change in money..
in 2007 it is now a passport is mandatory...
so you will not be so shocked..when you travel from u.s./canada.


good luck

2007-01-18 14:04:52 · answer #1 · answered by m2 5 · 0 0

There are a few reasons for price differences between Canada and the US. One is currency exchange. Most companies will do the pricing months before the product hits the shelves, and the exchange rate can vary between those dates. Most corporations will also build in some level of fluctuation downwards, so todays 85 cent dollar will be priced at a 75 cent dollar rate in case it goes down. Usually, this does not benefit the consumer.

Next, tariffs and taxes. From import, to GST/PST, to hidden taxes, Canadians basically pay more for products to be brought in and sold in Canada. Some tariffs are to try and protect home industries (ie milk), but others are there to protest tariffs other countries put on Canadian products. Once again, the conusmer usually has to pay more.

Finally, the sheer numbers for companies to make their profit. In the US, a country wide chain has 300 million possiblte consumers, while in Canada it is 30 million. Bulk purchasing and mass selling in the US allows for profit margins to be lower and made up by sheer quantity. In Canada, with a popluation equal to California, companies need to made more profit on fewer items sold. And the consumer pays more.

There are a few items that are cheaper after exchange in Canada. I have found that CD's and DVD's are often cheaper in Canada, as well as video games.

2007-01-22 02:52:43 · answer #2 · answered by Nice Guy 3 · 0 0

i in my opinion imagine the authorities should be investigating this very question, because it in basic terms smacks of value-fixing and anticompetitiveness. Did you listen about the scuffle those days between the recent cellular telephone agencies and Rogers? Rogers is clearly out to attempt to squash the contest as a thanks to save right on charging their ripoff costs. i believe the cellular telephone marketplace isn't the in common words position this takes position. That cellular telephone you got wasn't even made in Canada, or the U. S.. It became made in China. Why it expenses 3x as a lot to airfreight something to Vancouver because it does to Seattle? Who is conscious of. a mess of the logistics stuff easily takes position in southern Ontario., which ability a product easily in many cases is going from the Port of Vancouver to the save in Vancouver by ability of Toronto, as awesome as that sounds. nutrients is sent round a lot too. Canada's labour expenses are higher. The regulations are tighter. that is a smaller, more effective spread out marketplace. and finally the legally sanctioned monopolies; certain minimum costs for nutrients products like milk and eggs (and BC is somewhat undesirable for that) and shortage of competition in a lot of alternative elements in basic terms stifle the type of aggressive pricewars that save American costs so low. And Canadians do not communicate out about it. I advise, i'm keen to pay more effective for a Canadian product - i advise, the day surpassed by i purchased some Niagara strawberries, by some ability more effective expensive regardless of being ninety no longer 4000km away, yet oh a lot nicer than California berries yet there are limits.

2016-10-15 10:34:51 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

- The Canadian currency is a lower than the American currency
- A lot of the stuff that is bought in Canada must go through the US first, so Canadians end up paying the American cost, AND the cost to have it shipped to Canada AND any taxes attached.

2007-01-18 14:02:23 · answer #4 · answered by ch_ris_l 5 · 0 0

It isn't exactly. We may charge $7 for something in Canada, but it's pretty close to equvalent of $5 in American money. Technically you are paying the same amount of money for the same product, there is just a difference in what our money is worth.

2007-01-18 14:01:22 · answer #5 · answered by kiera70 5 · 0 0

The Canadian dollar is not worth as much as the US dollar. As such, to buy the same thing you would require more Canadian dollars than US dollars. Also, transportation costs and differences in the Canadian and American markets could also be potential factors in the difference in price.

2007-01-18 13:58:06 · answer #6 · answered by Ape Ape Man 4 · 0 0

$7 Canadian is equal to just under $6 US.

2007-01-18 13:59:58 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Cause we like to spend money on hockey tickets.

2007-01-18 14:03:01 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Shipping and tariffs on imports.

2007-01-18 13:57:21 · answer #9 · answered by mickeyg1958 4 · 0 0

DUH,.. this US and we are a totally different country than Canada,..... havent you read your geography book lately?

2007-01-18 14:12:18 · answer #10 · answered by ~~~Buffy~~~ 6 · 0 1

fedest.com, questions and answers