While it's true we here in Canada pay more for these services a big part of that is our smaller population density compared to the US and EU.
Well over half of Canada's population lives within the lower quarter of the country so there are vast areas with less than one person per square kilometre while some southern cities have higher population densities than many US or EU cities.
If you live outside a town or city in the north like I do access to many services is limited or non-existent. We only upgraded from dial-up internet to a fairly slow wireless service in 2012. If more than one person in the house tried watching even lower rez video at the same time there were lots of pauses. Very annoying. Not long ago we upgraded that to a new wireless service provided by Telus called the Hub. My best download speeds now are 6x faster at around 1MBps. We've been getting many drop-outs lasting from a minute or two to up to half an hour sometimes many times a day which I have been logging and will be raising hell with them soonish.
I still have a land-line also thru Telus as is my satellite TV service. Switching to the Hub and getting all 3 services thru the same company is saving me $80/mth. They are phasing out satellite TV and are supposed to offer TV via the Hub but if it drops out like the internet does it's going to be very annoying to say the least. Cell service is pretty crappy with only 1 bar here in the mancave and 2 or 3 in the living room at the front of the house facing the nearest tower. I have my desktop hard-wired from the Hub modem in the living room for faster service. Last year I had to upgrade to a new 5G capable phone as the app for my new drone wouldn't install on the old one but we won't get 5G cell service for a while yet.
No cable TV here, no home delivery of any kind so if we want a pizza it's a 20mile/30km round trip to get one and the same for mail so we make two trips to town every week for that. Zip for public transit and even Greyhound stopped passenger service a couple years ago.
Density map from 2016 but I doubt it's changed since then other than maybe a bit higher density in the south.
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