PEF home page and weblog

We have been picking on copyright a lot recently, but we should not neglect patents, that other arm of “intellectual property”. Like copyright, patents confer monopoly power. They have little to do with a “free market” but everything to do with real-world capitalism. In his monthly column, Joseph Stiglitz makes the case against patents with [...]
Posted by Marc Lee under development, intellectual property.
March 9th, 2007
Comments: 2
From the keynote speech delivered by Paul Krugman at the Economic Policy Institute’s recent conference on The Agenda for Shared Prosperity: A History of America’s Disappearing Middle Class By Paul Krugman …One thing I’ve been noticing on multiple debates in public policies — climate change is another one — is there seems to be an [...]
Posted by Marc Lee under inequality, unions, US.
March 9th, 2007
Comments: 1
This morning, Statistics Canada released its Labour Force Survey figures for February. My analysis, which was included in the CLC’s press release, follows: Manufacturing Crisis Deepens Canada lost 35,000 manufacturing jobs between January and February. This staggering one-month decline pushes the cumulative loss to 250,000 since Canadian manufacturing peaked in November 2002. Most of February’s [...]
Posted by Erin Weir under Alberta, inequality, labour market, StatCan, unemployment.
March 9th, 2007
Comments: 1
Eric Reguly sizes up the trial of Conrad Black. Added to the news that the British House of Commons voted to change the House of Lords to a 100% elected body, things are not going well for Lady Slatternly’s lover: If he’s afraid, it doesn’t show If Conrad Black fears for his freedom, his [...]
Posted by Marc Lee under super-rich.
March 8th, 2007
Comments: none
http://www.liberal.ca/news_e.aspx?type=speech&id=12324 No big surprises in today’s big speech to a business audience – the usual mainstream Finance/OECD stuff on enhancing competitiveness by building a knowledge based economy. Surprisingly little in the way of an attempt to link industrial and environmental policy, for all of that green rhetoric during the leadership campaign. Ditto re any linkage [...]
Posted by Andrew Jackson under Uncategorized.
March 8th, 2007
Comments: none
The Economist so fetishizes “free trade” that it eagerly swallows TILMA without bothering to do any fact-checking. The way this is framed below, you would think people in BC are cheering that they will finally be able to buy Alberta oil. As for evidence, the article points to the Fraser Institute, who has not done [...]
Posted by Marc Lee under TILMA.
March 8th, 2007
Comments: 2
http://www.epi.org/ A project of the Economic Policy Institute in Washington, this involves some 50 economists and policy specialists in the task of developing a new, progressive US economic policy agenda. The link from the EPI web site leads to some good papers by Jeff Faux on trade, and Richard Freeman and others on unions, as [...]
Posted by Andrew Jackson under progressive economic strategies.
March 8th, 2007
Comments: none
Our politicians are obsessed with tax cuts. The next election will now feature the battle of the tax cuts, with the Canada’s New Harperment pushing for more GST cuts (and who knows what other plans to reduce the size of the federal government) versus Dion’s plan for more personal and corporate income tax cuts. Meanwhile, [...]
Posted by Marc Lee under federal budget, taxation.
March 8th, 2007
Comments: 4
Announcing the Center for the Applied Study of Economics & the Environment, a new US grouping of progressive economists. Here is their manifesto: Real People, Real Environments, and Realistic Economics The wealth and power of humanity in the 21st century could be used to create a far better world. We write as economists who are [...]
Posted by Marc Lee under environment, inequality, progressive economic strategies, US.
March 8th, 2007
Comments: none
The Globe Report and Business has a story today (can’t find it online) to the effect that the federal Budget will improve depreciation rates for new capital equipment investment, but not lower the general corporate income tax rate beyond already planned levels. As noted by Erin in an earlier post, this reflects Finance thinking as [...]
Posted by Andrew Jackson under industrial policy, taxation.
March 8th, 2007
Comments: 3
John Ibbitson leaps to the defence of the US entertainment industry and their bid to hold back the tide of history. It is not clear at all what harms are being caused by the existing Copyright Act and why it should be fixed to make rich US entertainment corporations even richer. To channel Dean Baker, [...]
Posted by Marc Lee under intellectual property, US.
March 7th, 2007
Comments: 3
The story below was the banner headline piece on page one of today’s Vancouver Sun, and is a perfect choice for the “we told you so” file. Three years ago, after being awarded the 2010 Olympics, our BC Solutions Budget (and in subsequent editions) made many of the same points as the Olympics Housing Roundtable’s [...]
Posted by Marc Lee under BC, homeless, housing, income support, Olympics, poverty.
March 7th, 2007
Comments: none
Richard Parker of Harvard probes the legacy of John Kenneth Galbraith, perhaps in anticipation of the Progressive Economics Forum’s soon-to-be-inaugurated John Kenneth Galbraith Prize in Economics (at the Canadian Economics Association meetings in Halifax this June). From the Post-Autistic Economics Review: Does John Kenneth Galbraith Have a Legacy? … I think it would behoove all [...]
Posted by Marc Lee under history of economic thought.
March 6th, 2007
Comments: 2
Published in The Tyee, as Divided, We’re Falling: Book Review of Dimensions of Inequality in Canada Edited by David A. Green and Jonathan R. Kesselman UBC Press ISBN 0-7748-1208-7 August 2006 http://www.ubcpress.ca/search/title_book.asp?BookID=4518 Review by Marc Lee A poll last Fall by Environics for the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives found that three-quarters of Canadians felt [...]
Posted by Marc Lee under inequality.
March 6th, 2007
Comments: none
I shared the podium recently in Sydney with Neal Lawson, who is the chairperson for a very interesting U.K. initiative called Compass. As far as I can tell, Compass is kind of a cross between a think-tank and an activist network. Its explicit goal has been to challenge the right-wing policies of the New Labour [...]
Posted by Jim Stanford under progressive economic strategies.
March 5th, 2007
Comments: none
BC’s Economic Development Minister Colin Hansen has been waving around at every opportunity a study by the Conference Board of Canada that allegedly demonstrate the benefits the deal will bring. When the report was finally released to the public this past January, Erin Weir and I were so shocked at how shabby the research was [...]
Posted by Marc Lee under BC, TILMA.
March 5th, 2007
Comments: 2
Another teaser from James Galbraith, who will be joining us at the Canadian Economics Association meetings to inaugurate the John Kenneth Galbraith Prize in Economics, and will also be presenting on a panel on inequality. His presentation might go something like this: Bush’s beltway boom By James K. Galbraith The rise of the Democrats [...]
Posted by Marc Lee under inequality, US.
March 5th, 2007
Comments: none
Something rotten in the state of Denmark? Here’s an interesting take on Copenhagen’s recent youth riots. Anarchy in the DK Jakob Illeborg Copenhagen is burning. For four days the downtown area of the Danish capital has looked like a war zone. At least 690 people have been arrested, many of them younger than 18. As [...]
Posted by Marc Lee under Nordics.
March 5th, 2007
Comments: 2
Advantage Canada is the “economic plan” released with November’s Economic and Fiscal Update. In reading through it yesterday, I was struck by its statements about a couple of “free trade” agreements. Trade, Investment and Labour Mobility Agreement (TILMA) Marc and I demonstrate that there are few tangible examples of trade barriers between provinces and no evidence [...]
Posted by Erin Weir under big business, deep integration, free trade, TILMA.
March 5th, 2007
Comments: none
The Guardian on Livingstone’s latest for the city of London: Cleaning up the Big Smoke: Livingstone plans to cut carbon emissions by 60% · Londoners given 20-year target to go green · Flights could drastically affect success of campaign David Adam and Hugh Muir Tuesday February 27, 2007 The Guardian A detailed plan to slash [...]
Posted by Marc Lee under cities, climate change.
March 3rd, 2007
Comments: 1
Yesterday, Finance Canada released “Tax Expenditures and Evaluations 2006.” The tax-expenditure figures confirm Andrew’s suggestion that the partial inclusion of capital gains now costs the federal government about $3 billion per year of forgone personal taxes: the 2006 projection is $3.1 billion. This partial inclusion cost an additional $3.4 billion of forgone corporate taxes that [...]
Posted by Erin Weir under C. D. Howe Institute, federal budget, globalization, taxation.
March 2nd, 2007
Comments: 3
Yesterday, the CCPA released a study on inequality filled with statistics about how life has changed for families with children. John Ibbitson shrugs his shoulders and responds with a polemic. He provides some “balance” by trashing right-wing think tanks, too, but in typical Ibbitson fashion provides not a shred of evidence for anything he says. [...]
Posted by Marc Lee under economic growth, inequality.
March 2nd, 2007
Comments: 1
I hope that enough Liberals and Conservatives will vote for Bill C-257 to pass it on March 21. However, Stephan Dion and his labour critic have announced that they will not support it because the Speaker ruled their essential-service amendments inadmissable. The Canada Labour Code already protects essential services during labour disputes. Workers in federally [...]
Posted by Erin Weir under labour market, regulation, unions.
March 2nd, 2007
Comments: none
Adam Frucci at Gizmodo has it out for the Recording Industry Association of America, the good folks who like to sue teenagers and students in order to protect their lucrative oligopoly. This nonsense may soon be coming to Canada if changes to the Copyright under contemplation in Ottawa win the day (introduced initially by the [...]
Posted by Marc Lee under intellectual property, US.
March 1st, 2007
Comments: 2
There is an astonishingly large underclass in the world’s richest nation: Gov’t estimates 754,000 homeless people By STEPHEN OHLEMACHER, Associated Press The nation has three-quarters of a million homeless people, filling emergency shelters through the year and spilling into special seasonal shelters in the coldest months, the government said Wednesday. The Department of Housing and [...]
Posted by Marc Lee under homeless, poverty, US.
March 1st, 2007
Comments: none
http://www.canadianlabour.ca/index.php/briefs_to_parliament/1096 The Canadian Labour Congress today submitted to the Parliamentary Committee looking at Bill C-30, the Clean Air Act which deals with greenhouse gas emissions. Our brief sets out a broad labour perspective on climate change issues – focusing on the need for a planned transition to a more environmentally sustainable economy. Labour supports sticking [...]
Posted by Andrew Jackson under climate change, environment.
March 1st, 2007
Comments: 1
This story in the Star points at (another) re-announcement of the Working Income Tax Benefit (WITB), a Canadian version of the US Earned Income Tax Credit first announced by then-finance minister Ralph Goodale in his economic and fiscal update prior to the last election. In the 2006 federal budget, the Tories announced they were continuing [...]
Posted by Marc Lee under federal budget, income support, poverty.
March 1st, 2007
Comments: 2
The CCPA released a study today, part of a mega-project on inequality in Canada, looking at changes in income and work hours for Canadian families with children. The report, by Armine Yalnizyan, finds that the top 10% are pulling away. While the report looks at distribution by deciles, it would be interesting to pull a [...]
Posted by Marc Lee under inequality, labour market.
March 1st, 2007
Comments: 1
This piece in the New York Times by economist Austan Goolsbee is a nice antidote to the puff piece, My Dinner with Conrad, that appeared on the cover and a full page in the main section of today’s Globe and Mail. In that piece, the author lowers the standards of journalism even further by submitting [...]
Posted by Marc Lee under super-rich.
March 1st, 2007
Comments: 4
The following is intended to be a complete and accessible list of papers, but not articles, on TILMA. If I have missed anything, please link to it in a “comment.” Criticism of TILMA Gerlach, Loretta. Examining the Implications of TILMA for Saskatchewan. Regina: Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives, 2006. Gould, Ellen. Asking for Trouble: The [...]
Posted by Erin Weir under Alberta, BC, TILMA.
March 1st, 2007
Comments: none