Education is another one of Canada’s many contributions to its citizens, offering free primary and secondary education and subsidized post-secondary studies, …show more content…
The second is comprehensiveness: that is that all health services, including hospitals, physicians and surgical dentists, must be insured. The third is universality, meaning all residents are entitled to equal levels of health care. The fourth is portability, which states that a resident that moves to a different province or territory Is still entitled to coverage from their home province during the minimum wait period in the new province, including residents that leave the country. The last of the five principles is accessibility, which states that all persons insured have within reason access to health care facilities, and that all physicians, hospitals, and other health providers must be provided reasonable compensation for services. Because health insurance is controlled by individual provinces and territories all new residents must apply for and are subject to wait period that under the Canada Health act cannot exceed 3months. Once health coverage has been granted a health card is issued, which provides the resident with coverage in that province or …show more content…
In 2013, this sector accounted for 20% of the forest sector’s contribution to the Canadian economy.
Although Canada is considered a social market economy, the economic margin for operation is very large, in the Table of Economic Freedom. Similar to other industrialized countries the Canadian economy is controlled by the services sector, although its primary sector is exceeding average, this, is in large part due to Canada’s overflow of natural resources and their utilization.
In regards to commodities mining is of the most importance Canada because of its large quantity of natural resources. Although Canada is the world’s largest producer of zinc, uranium, potassium, cadmium, sulfur and nickel, it ranks third in the deprivation of aluminum, titanium, cobalt, and molybdenum, gold and lead the country ranks third; and almost 80% of the exploited resources are exported, primarily to the United States.
The Canadian legal system has undergone tremendous evolution over the last century and a half. Canada’s legal system is rooted in British law, thus making their fundamental principles and practices comparable to the laws that govern the United Kingdom and other countries historical rule by British