The gap between the country's economic health and Canadians' well-being has widened over a two-decade period, according to a report released Tuesday.
Over the period studied in the report -- 1994 through 2014 -- Canadian gross domestic product grew by 38 per cent, said Bryan Smale, a professor at the University of Waterloo and the director of the Canadian Index of Wellbeing.
"But our well-being has only grown by about just under 10 per cent, and that gap between our well-being and economic progress is growing," Smale told CBC News.
Not socializing as much