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I have the following op-ed on page A19 of today’s Toronto Star. It reiterates points made before on this blog. The only substantive difference is that I had previously low-balled the annual profits of Ontario’s Crown corporations at $4 billion. Today’s op-ed assumes $4.3 billion, the amount anticipated for the current fiscal year. That assumption [...]
Posted by Erin Weir under liberals, media, Ontario, privatization.
March 10th, 2010
Comments: 1
Yesterday afternoon, I caught the subway down to Queen’s Park to find out whether the throne speech would shed any light on the provincial government’s privatization plans. As it turned out, the speech included only a couple of lines on Crown corporations. But I ran into blogger extraordinaire Warren Kinsella at the legislature and note [...]
Posted by Erin Weir under Blogroll, corporate income tax, HST, Jack Mintz, media, Ontario.
March 9th, 2010
Comments: 1
I’ve been remiss in not posting information about and links to the federal budget analysis that we did at CUPE, as Paul Tulloch had urged on this blog. In addition to the press release we issued, there’s an overview and summary that I prepared on budget day, and a dozen really good detailed issue sheets that [...]
Posted by Toby Sanger under budgets, federal budget.
March 9th, 2010
Comments: none
I was pleasantly surprised to see a report published yesterday by Don Drummond and Francis Fong at the TD Bank on the Changing Canadian Workplace. It provides a short but decent summary of some different issues affecting labour: macro trends, educational requirements, changing composition, women, immigrants, aboriginal Canadians, older workers, widening income gaps, income security, etc. [...]
Posted by Toby Sanger under Don Drummond, labour market, women.
March 9th, 2010
Comments: 1
Today’s day-after-International-Women’s-Day story in the New York Times by Nancy Folbre links to four indices of gender equity. http://economix.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/03/08/the-worlds-best-countries-for-women/ How is Canada doing? Canada ranks 4th in the Human Development Index (we were number one for eight years) as well as the UNDP Gender Development Index, behind Norway, Australia and Iceland. Norway has been ranked [...]
Posted by Armine Yalnizyan under inequality, rankings, women.
March 9th, 2010
Comments: 1
Last weekend, I spoke at a community event celebrating International Women’s Day in Vancouver. It got me thinking about the status of women in the Canadian economy, reflecting both on the successes over the last half century and on the areas where work is still needed to achieve gender equality. As a young woman in [...]
Posted by Iglika Ivanova under women.
March 8th, 2010
Comments: 9
This morning, Statistics Canada released Corporations Returns Act data for 2007: Foreign acquisitions of Canadian-controlled firms, particularly in manufacturing and oil and gas, drove a 10.6% increase in Canadian assets under foreign control in 2007. Canadian assets under Canadian control rose 9.9%, led by the depository credit intermediation industry. As a result of these movements, [...]
Posted by Erin Weir under foreign investment/ownership, StatCan.
March 8th, 2010
Comments: 2
My post on this past Monday’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP) release emphasized the disconnect between profits and investment in the corporate sector. As Andrew commented on that post, the public sector’s contribution to the recovery is also noteworthy. That point seems especially relevant in the wake of a federal budget devoted to continuing previously announced [...]
Posted by Erin Weir under federal budget, fiscal policy, GDP, monetary policy, StatCan, stimulus.
March 7th, 2010
Comments: 2
The front page of today’s Toronto Star reports, “The Ontario government is looking at creating a publicly held $60 billion ‘super corporation’ of assets such as the Liquor Control Board of Ontario and Hydro One and then selling a minority share to private investors.” It would also include the province’s other major Crown corporations: Ontario [...]
Posted by Erin Weir under budgets, media, Ontario, privatization.
March 6th, 2010
Comments: 1
Analysis of the 2010 Federal Budget by David MacDonald, coordinator of the CCPA’s Alternative Federal Budget: If there was any policy recalibration due to prorogation, it was on their photocopier as 94% of this budget’s spending has already been announced. The problem when you photocopy your work is that you don’t learn anything from the [...]
Posted by Toby Sanger under budgets, federal budget.
March 5th, 2010
Comments: 1
The Budget contains no big surprises but is still a big disappointment. Despite the fact that unemployment is and will remain very high, economic stimulus measures effectively end after this year. A few very small new investments in jobs and skills will be made, but they do not amount to even the beginnings of a [...]
Posted by Andrew Jackson under federal budget, fiscal policy.
March 5th, 2010
Comments: none
I did not make it to the federal budget lock-up, and having pored over the document I am pleased to say I missed it. There is very little in this budget that one would expect of a budget in the midst of a recession (the GDP numbers have turned up, I know, but unemployment is [...]
Posted by Marc Lee under budgets, economic crisis, federal budget.
March 4th, 2010
Comments: 2
I am pleased to announce John Loxley as the winner of the 2010 John Kenneth Galbraith Prize in Economics. John will be joining us in Quebec City during the Canadian Economics Association meetings at the end of May to give the Second Galbraith Prize lecture. Please join us if you can make it! Below is [...]
Posted by Marc Lee under PEF.
March 4th, 2010
Comments: none
The 2010 BC Budget was a disappointment on the climate action front. Even as Premier Campbell waxed in the Globe about the impact of climate change on the 2010 Spring Games – with its sunny days, crocuses, daffodils and by the end, cherry blossoms making it fun for people on the street but a big [...]
Posted by Marc Lee under carbon pricing, climate change, resources.
March 3rd, 2010
Comments: none
As if there weren’t already enough reasons to eliminate the egregious stock option tax loophole, a column by Eric Reguly in this month’s Report on Business magazine highlights yet another. This reason helps to explain why we had such a booming stock market up to 2008, but little growth in real investment and productivity. First [...]
Posted by Toby Sanger under capitalism, corporate compensation, corporate income tax, economic crisis, federal budget, industrial policy, investment, productivity, taxation.
March 3rd, 2010
Comments: 9
[Notes from Marc and Iglika] For a document titled Building a Prosperous British Columbia, the 2010 BC Budget is underwhelming in its ambition. Budget 2010 shows a government talking a lot about the legacy of the Olympics but lacking any coherent vision of how translate upbeat sentiments into real improvements in British Columbians’ standard of [...]
Posted by Marc Lee under BC, budgets.
March 2nd, 2010
Comments: 2
Two weeks ago I wrote a critique of a very poorly done Conference Board of Canada report on P3s (public-private partnerships). This conference board study ignored recent major criticisms by provincial auditors general and interviewed almost exclusively P3 proponents. I’m happy to say that two business professors from B.C., Aidan Vining of SFU and Anthony Boardman of [...]
Posted by Toby Sanger under P3s.
March 1st, 2010
Comments: 1
(I wrote the following to circulate to some European colleagues.) Apparently former Canadian Finance Minister and Prime Minister Paul Martin is being tapped by the Europeans for advice on fiscal matters. “Former prime minister Paul Martin, finance minister in the 1990s when Canada’s dangerously high federal deficit was tackled and then eliminated, said Thursday he’s [...]
Posted by Andrew Jackson under fiscal policy.
March 1st, 2010
Comments: 2
The American scholar Alfred Crosby writes of the neo-Europes, the offshoots of Europe, the products of the settling of the New World while unsettling those whose world it already was. James Belich, an historian – who writes like an economic historian – of New Zealand now teaching in Australia, has written a massive and splendid [...]
Posted by Mel Watkins under economic growth, economic history.
March 1st, 2010
Comments: 1
Last Saturday, The Financial Post completed its Chopping Block, a series profiling federal programs that could be eliminated to balance the budget. A couple of weeks ago, the C. D. Howe Institute unveiled its Shadow Federal Budget, which advocated essentially the same approach. (Terry Corcoran deserves some credit for trying to identify quite specific cuts, as [...]
Posted by Erin Weir under C. D. Howe Institute, federal budget, labour market, media, Terry Corcoran.
March 1st, 2010
Comments: 2
Canada’s industrial engine appeared to restart in December. Gross Domestic Product (GDP) expanded by 0.6% that month, led by particularly strong growth in resource extraction, utilities, manufacturing and wholesale trade. December propelled the fourth quarter of 2009 to 1.2% growth, the fastest quarterly growth in a decade. Canada’s Recovery in Perspective While encouraging, the Canadian [...]
Posted by Erin Weir under corporate income tax, GDP, investment, StatCan.
March 1st, 2010
Comments: 1