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This book is one in a series produced by the Fraser Institute which scrutinizes the activities of professions in Canada. The purpose of the studies is to subject these occupational monopolies to the same searching analysis which the Institute applies to the activities of trade unions which are the other major group in society to whom legislation gives powers to restrict entry. This book studies a particular instance where a government is under pressure to tighten the cartelizing powers given to the accounting profession in the Province of Alberta. The objective of Professor Alexander Jenkins is to assess the current conditions under which the services of accountants are provided in the Province of Alberta and to enquire whether the general public in that province will be well served by a tightening of professional control - in particular, enshrining in law that audits in the province may be conducted only by the members of the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Alberta.

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The problem of unemployment has been the subject of a number of past Fraser Institute studies. This study attempts to get an analytical handle on this crucial issue by focusing on the relationship between the unemployment situation in Canada and that in the United States. In particular, persistently high rates of unemployment in Canada are analyzed in the context of the divergence of Canadian/U.S. unemployment rates in more recent years.

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Reaction: The New Combines Investigation Act, edited by Walter Block features the analysis of twelve nationally renowned economists and legal scholars. The economic theory underlying the new bill is highlighted, its legal implications are explored, and the historical, empirical and statistical record is brought to bear on the problem promoting a truly competitive business environment in Canada.

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Launched immediately after the U.S. election of 1984 so as to avoid any charge of partisanship, the U.S. Bishops' Pastoral Letter on the economy has taken the world's religious and intellectual communities by storm. This document applies the tradition of Catholic Social Teaching to problems of the economy, and then makes numerous public policy recommendations concerning poverty, unions, discrimination, unemployment, welfare, trade and foreign aid.

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This study is a comparison of the relative costs of the CBC-owned television stations and those of other private television stations.

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The Insurance Corporation of British Columbia (lCBC) was established in 1973. It was designed to replace a conventional private automobile insurance system by a state monopoly operating as a nonprofit Crown corporation. ICBC has all the characteristics of public monopolies throughout the world. The data suggest that privatizing it would be very much in the interest of British Columbians. There is a great lack of knowledge and the much misinformation that characterizes public opinion on this issue.These conditions prompted the author to write this analysis of the ICBC operation.

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This book is a transcript of the " Theology, Third World Development and Economic Justice " conference that was held on December 4, 1983 at the University of Regina.