Economics and Resources
Please review each article prior to use: grade-level applicability and curricular alignment might not be obvious from the headline alone.
Norway House files suit against Hydro, governments over Lake Winnipeg
5 minute read Preview Saturday, Feb. 21, 2026Entrepreneurs lauded as Manitoba Queer Chamber of Commerce’s biz awards return
5 minute read Preview Friday, Feb. 20, 2026Data centres and infrastructure: an expensive pairing
3 minute read Preview Friday, Feb. 20, 2026North at risk from ‘old battles,’ federal spending priorities, Axworthy says
5 minute read Thursday, Feb. 19, 2026Canada risks falling into a pattern of fighting “old battles” in the North — while ramping up defence spending — as it cuts funding to handle wildfires and internal migration, former federal minister Lloyd Axworthy warns.
U.S. International Trade Commission launches CUSMA rules-of-origin auto investigation
3 minute read Preview Saturday, Feb. 21, 2026Alberta’s Smith to put immigration, Constitution questions on fall referendum
5 minute read Preview Saturday, Feb. 21, 2026City library visits up 28 per cent from 2022
4 minute read Preview Thursday, Feb. 19, 2026With new American pressure, will Cuba fall?
5 minute read Preview Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2026Homelessness a humanitarian crisis, Rattray says
6 minute read Preview Tuesday, Feb. 17, 2026Food inflation spiked 7.3% in January. Here’s what’s driving the increase
6 minute read Preview Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2026Maintenance isn’t enough — we have to build
5 minute read Tuesday, Feb. 17, 2026For the third year in a row, the atmosphere in Manitoba’s staffrooms during the provincial school funding announcement has been one of cautious relief rather than the dread we came to expect for a decade.
As a high school teacher-librarian and a parent with a child in the public system, I want to begin by acknowledging the progress made.
After the lean, adversarial years of the Brian Pallister and Heather Stefanson governments, years defined by the looming threat of Bill 64 and funding increases that didn’t even cover the cost of a box of pencils, the current NDP government has chosen a different path.
This $79.8-million injection for the 2026-27 school year, building on the $104-million and $67-million investments of the previous two years, represents nearly a quarter-billion-dollar shift in how we value our children’s future. For the nutrition programs, the salary harmonization, and the simple act of treating educators as partners rather than enemies: thank you.
Cuban drivers face monthslong wait for gasoline in a government app designed to reduce lines
5 minute read Preview Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2026Food inflation expected to jump in January amid tax changes: economists
4 minute read Preview Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2026Tired of waiting, First Nation buys $8M worth of generators
5 minute read Preview Friday, Feb. 13, 2026AI a potent wedge issue in U.S. midterms
4 minute read Friday, Feb. 13, 2026Americans head to the polls again in November with no shortage of issues at stake. The White House’s weaponization of tariffs, immigration crackdown, government purges and foreign adventurism have roiled the nation. But calls to rein in artificial intelligence (AI) may ultimately gain the most traction for candidates.
The Trump administration’s AI Action Plan, released last summer, promises to assert U.S. technological dominance at breakneck speed. The strategy vows Washington will dismantle barriers to data centre construction, eliminate a raft of “woke” safety measures and lean on other nations to buy American tech.
Silicon Valley evangelists have fully bought in. Amazon, Meta, Google and Microsoft alone have announced US$650 billion in AI-related spending for 2026. That eclipses the GDP of countries such as Israel or Norway. It also doesn’t factor in other venture capital investments elsewhere, or outlays from OpenAI, Anthropic or the Elon Musk-owned xAI.
A market strategist told the Wall Street Journal last month that the U.S. could plausibly be in a recession if it weren’t for AI investments. Although this isn’t necessarily a good thing. America’s economic growth “has become so dependent on AI-related investment and wealth,” the paper reported,” that if the boom turns to bust, it could take the broader economy with it.”