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Those economic horses showed plenty of pluck in 2024, gamely hauling the social cart through an unfamiliar post-COVID-19 pandemic terrain. (If unemployment was so low in Manitoba, why the heck were those nags making such poor time as per GDP growth?) Read this article for free: Already have an account? To continue reading, please subscribe: * Those economic horses showed plenty of pluck in 2024, gamely hauling the social cart through an unfamiliar post-COVID-19 pandemic terrain. (If unemployment was so low in Manitoba, why the heck were those nags making such poor time as per GDP growth?) Read unlimited articles for free today: Already have an account? Those economic horses showed plenty of pluck in 2024, gamely hauling the social cart through an unfamiliar post-COVID-19 pandemic terrain.

(If unemployment was so low in Manitoba, why the heck were those nags making such poor time as per GDP growth?) In some respects, the unusual dynamics allowed the field to clear, allowing new players to emerge (like the Manitoba Métis Federation). The sad culling of some favourite restaurants happened almost on cue after facing interminable pandemic shutdowns and the hand-wringing about downtown Winnipeg took on a more dire rhythm, but the top business stories of the year also included the kind of slow, steady pace Manitobans know and love and are resigned to live with. Despite some of their own looking for ancestral links to other nations so as not have to endure another four more years o.



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