Me, Myself and AI

What Would a Democratic Socialist Canada Actually Look Like?


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In this episode of Me, Myself & AI, Casey B dives into the growing wealth divide in Canada, where the richest 1% now control more wealth than the bottom 40% of families combined, and asks: is there a better way to structure our economy?


Through examples like Spain’s Mondragón cooperatives, Italy’s Emilia-Romagna co-op network, and the Nordic nations’ balance of innovation and equality, we explore what democratic socialism really means — and how it could work in a modern Canadian context.


Spoiler: it’s not about the government owning everything. It’s about people owning part of everything — through worker cooperatives, shared public wealth funds, and policies that make prosperity collective, not concentrated.


Casey breaks down:

• What “democratic socialism” actually means vs. common misconceptions

• Real-world proof that worker ownership can thrive

• Why innovation and equality aren’t opposites

• How countries like Sweden, Finland, and Norway turned equity into strength

• Practical next steps Canada could take right now


This isn’t about tearing down capitalism — it’s about fixing what’s broken and building an economy that works for everyone, not just the top 1%.


🧾 Show-Notes Sources

• Canadian Wealth Concentration: Parliamentary Budget Officer & Statistics Canada data — top 1% hold ~24% of national wealth; bottom 40% hold ~3.3%.

• Employee Ownership Trusts (Canada, 2023+): Canada Budget 2023 / Bill C-59 framework.

• Mondragón Cooperative Corporation: Federation of ~80,000 worker-owners, CEO-to-worker pay ratios typically 6:1 (range 3–9:1); survival rate ~97% over 30 years.

• Emilia-Romagna, Italy: Co-ops produce ≈ ⅓ of regional GDP; two-thirds of residents are members.

• Nordic Innovation & Equity: World Intellectual Property Organization – Global Innovation Index 2024 (Sweden #2 globally); OECD / UN data on inequality and productivity.

• World Happiness Report 2025: Finland #1 for 7 consecutive years; Denmark & Iceland follow closely.

• Norway Sovereign Wealth Fund: ~US $2 trillion assets; owns 1–2% of European equities; profits from publicly-owned oil reinvested for citizens.

• Research on Employee-Owned Firms: U.S. NCEO & UK Employee Ownership Association find higher productivity, wage equality, and survival rates.

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Me, Myself and AIBy Let CaseyBe