Viewpoints
Opinion

Canada’s Health-Care Monopoly Is Killing Us

Canada’s Health-Care Monopoly Is Killing Us
An ambulance drives past the Health Sciences Centre in Winnipeg on June 15, 2023. The Canadian Press/David Lipnowski
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Commentary

Canadians are proud of their universal health-care system. Politicians hold it up as proof of our compassion, while unions fight to preserve it and judges unfailingly defend it. But pride and rhetoric can’t mask reality: Canada spends more on health care than almost any other country in the world and delivers some of the worst results. Our hospitals are overloaded, wait times are intolerable, and tens of thousands of patients die each year before receiving the treatment they need.

Gwyn Morgan
Gwyn Morgan
Author
Gwyn Morgan devoted three decades to building North America’s leading oil and gas company. When he stepped down as founding CEO in 2006, EnCana Corporation had an enterprise value of approximately $60 billion. Gwyn has served as a director of five global corporations including HSBC. He was appointed a Member of the Order of Canada in 2011.