PAULS & ASSOCIATES

PAULS & ASSOCIATES Pauls and Associates is a well-established accounting firm providing tax, accounting, and other fina We give all our clients equal attention!

Our services are tailored to the unique needs of each client, ensuring the best possible results and maximized returns. Our firm remains on the cutting edge of tax law and financial trends. We stay well-informed and continually adapt to the ever-changing world of tax law and accounting.

02/24/2026

WE’RE HIRING – OFFICE ASSISTANT
NOUS EMBAUCHONS – ADJOINT(E) DE BUREAU (TEMPORAIRE)
Pauls and Associates is currently seeking a part-time Office Assistant to support our accounting office during our busy tax season, with a possibility of extension.
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Responsibilities / Responsabilités:
• Greeting clients / Accueil des clients
• Answering phone calls and booking appointments / Répondre aux appels et prendre les rendez-vous
• Data entry (good knowledge of Excel required) / Saisie de données (bonne connaissance d’Excel requise)
• General office and administrative support / Tâches générales de bureau et soutien administratif
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Requirements / Exigences:
• Bilingual (English & French) – required / Bilingue (français et anglais) – obligatoire
• Professional and friendly attitude / Attitude professionnelle et accueillante
• Good communication and organizational skills / Bonnes compétences en communication et en organisation
• Comfortable in a client-facing environment / À l’aise avec la clientèle
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Position Details / Détails du poste :
• Hourly rate / Salaire : 20 $/Heure
• Contract / Contrat : Temporaire de 3 mois
• Schedule / Horaire : 9 h 30 à 18 h 00 (flexible)
• Work environment / Milieu de travail : Cabinet comptable
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How to Apply / Pour postuler :
📧 [email protected]
📞 514-585-6848
Pauls and Associates
Professional Accounting & Tax Services
Pauls et Associés
Services professionnels en comptabilité et fiscalité

11/27/2025

How Canada doing!!!!!

Good question — Canada’s economy is doing moderately well overall, but like many advanced economies it’s facing a number of pressures. What “doing well” or “struggling” looks like depends on what indicator you look at (growth, inflation, employment, debt, etc.). Here’s a current snapshot — what’s good, and where there are clouds.

✅ What’s going well for Canada
• Employment remains relatively strong

Canada’s labour market continues to show resilience. Employment rates have largely recovered from the pandemic slump.

Labour shortages in certain sectors have boosted wages and helped many households — though that also feeds inflation (see below).

• Natural-resources sector gives strength

As a major exporter of natural resources (energy, minerals, forestry, agriculture), Canada benefits when global commodity demand is healthy. That helps provinces and national trade balances.

By exporting raw materials to resource-hungry economies worldwide, Canada taps into global supply-demand trends — which cushions swings in other sectors somewhat.

• Government finances, social services & institutional resilience

Canada has a strong institutional framework, social safety nets, and public services that tend to stabilize over downturns.

Debt-to-GDP ratios are higher than pre-COVID, but interest rates remain manageable (for now), and the government still has fiscal capacity — giving room for support if needed (social programs, infrastructure, etc.).

• Innovation, immigration and skilled workforce

Canada remains attractive for immigration — which supplies labour, innovation and helps population growth.

Skilled labour and education infrastructure helps support future growth in sectors like tech, services, health, and green energy.

⚠️ What’s challenging / Risk factors
• Inflation & high cost of living

Inflation remains a big challenge: higher housing, food, energy, and service costs strain households.

Interest rate increases (to combat inflation) have made mortgages, loans and debt servicing more expensive — affecting home-buyers, families with mortgages, and small businesses.

• High household and public debt load

Many Canadians carry significant debt (mortgage, consumer debt). High interest rates increase the burden, reducing disposable income and consumer spending.

Government debt is also elevated post-COVID recovery and pandemic stimulus — limiting future fiscal flexibility.

• Housing affordability & regional imbalance

Housing prices in major urban centres remain very high, making affordability a growing problem.

Wealth and economic opportunity remain uneven across provinces/regions — those reliant on resource cycles can be volatile.

• Global economic headwinds & dependency on commodities

Canada’s reliance on commodity exports (oil, minerals, agriculture) makes it vulnerable to swings in global demand and price volatility.

Global recession risks, slower world trade, and geopolitical tensions could reduce demand for Canadian exports.

• Productivity and structural challenges

While Canada has many strengths, productivity growth has been relatively slow compared with top global economies.

Transitioning to high-value, knowledge-based industries — e.g., tech, green energy — remains a work in progress, especially outside major urban hubs.

📊 Where things stand (rough picture)
Indicator / Feature Status / Outlook
Labour / Employment Relatively strong overall; some sectors hiring strongly
Inflation / Cost of Living Elevated — pressure on households
Debt (household & public) High — interest rate risk for debt servicing
Exports / Resource Sector Strength remains when commodity prices are favorable
Social / Public Services / Institutional Stability Solid, with safety nets and policy flexibility
Housing & Affordability Challenged in major cities; regional disparities
Long-Term Growth & Diversification Mixed: some progress, but structural headwinds remain
🎯 What this means for “everyday Canadians” (and you)

If you’re working, have moderate expenses, and manage debt — things are reasonable but the rising cost of living is a real challenge.

If you have a mortgage or variable-rate debt, higher interest rates and inflation may pinch cash flow.

For long-term planning (education, investments, retirement) — conservative strategies remain wise: diversify investments, account for inflation and interest-rate risk, maintain emergency liquidity.

For entrepreneurs, small business owners or investors — uncertainty across global demand and commodity markets suggests caution but also opportunity in niches (services, renewables, tech, export-oriented sectors).

Address

5465 Queen Marry Street Suite 485
Montreal, QC
H3X1V5

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