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Originally Posted by vid
In addition to the cheap labour, the Chinese government is the sole landowner in that country and brings in billions (if not trillions) in rent, and can do whatever it wants with the land. In China if the government wants to build something, they can forcibly remove people from the land and do it right away without any studies. In Canada, people can own property and have a right to have a say on how land on and adjacent to it is used. If the government wants to do something, it needs permission from the people to do it and must undertake numerous studies.
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Since 2005 China has had a freehold system of property ownership (for the cities at least). So yes, it can be argued that since the Chinese government holds radical title, it is technically the "owner" of all land. But Canada works in almost exactly the same way; recall that the "crown" is the ultimate owner of land in Canada. The only difference is our government doesn't bully people into giving up their land, but for subway construction using tunnel boring techniques, it's not a huge issue.
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Originally Posted by MonkeyRonin
Ah yes, lets discard all our labour laws and pay workers a paltry wage for being overworked in less safe working conditions! Brilliant!
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I wouldn't want to discard the rights of workers as human beings, but I certainly would want to put a contract out to tender rather than have everything done in-house by overpaid union members. Example: Beijing's subway was funded in a joint venture between BPT and Hong Kong's MTR, and is actually run by the MTR instead of BPT. Quite sad that even communists can teach us something about public-private partnerships.
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Originally Posted by caltrane74
Not only that but car ownership in Toronto is likely 3 times higher in Toronto than in Bejing, which in theory would equalize us in the fact we are only building a third of the Rapid Transit that they're building there.
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First population, now car ownership rates. Excuses, Excuses. How do you think we're going to wrestle people from their cars? Ridership numbers prove that they love grade-separated rapid transit, so why not make that a priority?