PEF home page and weblog

Since becoming Liberal leader, Dion has consistently made noises about cutting corporate taxes. On Friday, he clearly and specifically committed to slash corporate taxes “deeper than the Conservatives.” A Liberal strategist quoted in the Financial Post indicated that the plan is to outflank the Conservatives on the right regarding tax policy. Also on Friday, the [...]
Posted by Erin Weir under big business, corporate income tax, media, taxation.
October 13th, 2007
Comments: 4
One of my favourite things monitoring this blog stems from a post I made last year about Aeroplan disenfranchising its members who did not keep ponying up. Almost everyday lately I have been getting a comment from some furious person who lost their points. At some point along the way someone suggested the idea of [...]
Posted by Marc Lee under big business.
October 12th, 2007
Comments: 123
I voted in favour of MMP (multi member proportionality) in the Ontario election yesterday, against some misgivings – notably the low threshold to gain representation – because of the clear gains – a better translation of electorate sentiment into seats, and an incentive to democratic participation. (Living in McGuinty’s seat, I voted even though I [...]
Posted by Andrew Jackson under democracy.
October 12th, 2007
Comments: 3
Yesterday’s Ontario election was pretty crummy. Almost the entire campaign was dominated by a contrived issue. Turnout hit an all-time low, with barely more than half of eligible voters bothering to cast ballots. Despite a smaller percentage of the popular vote than in the last election, the McGuinty Liberals cruised to a huge majority. The [...]
Posted by Erin Weir under democracy, Ontario, resources, Saskatchewan, TILMA.
October 11th, 2007
Comments: none
Tomorrow I jet to Toronto for my 20th anniversary high school reunion. Like any such reunion, it will be interesting to see just how far the hairlines have receded and bellies expanded. But I cannot help feeling that my reunion will be different. See, I went to Upper Canada College, our country’s most elite private [...]
Posted by Marc Lee under education.
October 10th, 2007
Comments: 1
StatsCan reported last Friday that, based on data from the Labour Force Survey, hourly wages were up by 4.2% September, 2006 to September, 2007, the biggest monthly increase since the Survey began collecting wage data in 2007. With inflation running at 1.7%, it’s no wonder that news of a real wage increase of 2.5% in [...]
Posted by Andrew Jackson under inflation, wages.
October 9th, 2007
Comments: none
During the provincial campaign, Dalton McGuinty seems to have changed his tune on TILMA. This change is somewhat reminiscent of the Saskatchewan Party’s “road to Damascus” conversion on the issue. Six months ago, McGuinty praised TILMA and mused about joining it. A couple of weeks ago, he wrote the following in response to a questionnaire [...]
Posted by Erin Weir under labour market, regulation, TILMA, unions.
October 9th, 2007
Comments: none
As the provincial referendum on adopting Mixed Member Proportional (MMP) nears, figuring out strange scenarios in which this voting system might not work well seems to have become Ontario’s favourite indoor sport. All of this hypothesizing appears to be losing sight of the fact that MMP is clearly better (or less bad) than the existing [...]
Posted by Erin Weir under democracy, media.
October 5th, 2007
Comments: 3
My take on Statistics Canada’s release follows: The Dollar Hits Parity During the reference period for this Labour Force Survey, September 15 through 22, the Canadian dollar reached parity with the American dollar. Today’s release does not capture the consequences that have begun to play out since then. A rapidly-rising exchange rate has increased the [...]
Posted by Erin Weir under labour market, manufacturing, StatCan, wages.
October 5th, 2007
Comments: 5
Here’s a Freudian slip worthy of the internet age. Go to the home page for the Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade: http://www.dfait.gc.ca/index.aspx To find their section dealing with free trade negotiations, you go to the menu on the left, under a category titled “Services for Business.” We certainly couldn’t list free trade negotiations [...]
Posted by Jim Stanford under free trade.
October 5th, 2007
Comments: none
The United Steelworkers have put out the following press release: Research confirms value of manufacturing to Canada’s economy TORONTO, Oct. 4 /CNW/ – An interim report on manufacturing prepared by Ottawa-based econometrics firm Informetrica shows that manufacturing plays an important role in supporting all sectors of the economy, and has been hurt by both the [...]
Posted by Erin Weir under economic models, exchange rates, manufacturing, media, R&D, unions.
October 4th, 2007
Comments: 6
For a document that weighs in at close to 500 pages, the federal budget contains precious little information about much of what the federal government does. The revenue side of the ledger is not bad, but the expenditure side is just plain awful. Try it yourself: the 2007 federal budget is here. Now tell me: [...]
Posted by Marc Lee under federal budget.
October 3rd, 2007
Comments: 1
The Government of Saskatchewan announced increases to the minimum wage today as a step forward to providing a living wage that will assist working families and young people participate in our prosperous economy. The increase will take place in three stages that will see the minimum wage move to $8.25 per hour on January 1, [...]
Posted by Andrew Jackson under minimum wage, Saskatchewan.
October 3rd, 2007
Comments: none
Under current rules, the EI premium rate is supposed to be set at the precise level anticipated by the Chief Actuary to match program revenues with program expenses. (The accumulated surplus of more than $50 Billion run up under the Liberals as a result of deep benefit cuts and slow premium reductions sits in a [...]
Posted by Andrew Jackson under Employment Insurance.
October 2nd, 2007
Comments: 3
The business pages are covering this rather arcane issue more and more intensively. The Canadian market for so-called non bank asset backed commercial paper or ABCP has more or less frozen up, leaving some $40 Billion in stranded assets. Much of this seems to be held by large pension funds and other large institutions, with [...]
Posted by Andrew Jackson under asset backed commercial paper, financial markets, Uncategorized.
October 2nd, 2007
Comments: 3
Thomas Palley, formerly of the AFL-CIO, just posted a very good piece on “The New Economics of Trade” that clearly connects the dots between several themes frequently discussed on this blog.
Posted by Erin Weir under China, inequality, trade disputes, transportation, unions, US.
October 1st, 2007
Comments: none
There have been suggestions that the Conservative government’s forthcoming Throne Speech will surrender the federal spending power. Through an op-ed in today’s Globe and Mail, Bob Rae tries to position himself, and presumably the Liberal Party, as defenders of the power. This posturing will help the Conservatives woo Quebec nationalists and help the Liberals appeal [...]
Posted by Erin Weir under federal budget, federalism, fiscal federalism, health care, taxation, TILMA.
October 1st, 2007
Comments: 3
From the New York Times (thanks to Price Tags for leading me there): The blue and yellow sign along Main Street in Ridgefield looked a lot like a historical marker, but something wasn’t quite right. Rather than commemorate a famous person who had stood there, or an event that had shaped history, the marker honored [...]
Posted by Marc Lee under big business, China.
October 1st, 2007
Comments: none
Leading Canadian economist Richard Lipsey (with co author Swedenboorg) has written quite an interesting paper for the NBER, “Explaining Product Price Differences Across Countries.” http://www.nber.org/papers/w13239 The abstract reads as follows: “A substantial part of international differences in prices of individual products, both goods and services, can be explained by differences in per capita income, wage [...]
Posted by Andrew Jackson under prices, social democracy, wages.
October 1st, 2007
Comments: none