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The United States and Canada are partners in trade, national security, and environmental management. The political state of affairs between Canada and the United States is a constant source of concern for Canadians whose prosperity and security to a large extent depend on this relationship. From the American point of view, Canada is a neighbour, a partner in NAFTA, and a diplomatic ally in several key security arrangements, including NORAD and NATO. Much of American policy and many laws enacted in the United States Congress have a direct or indirect impact on Canadians. Despite the importance of this relationship, there are few studies using objectively measured indicators to shed light on how legislators perceive these shared interests. In order to fill this void, we previously undertook a quantification of the sentiment held by Canadian Parliamentarians towards the United States as expressed in debates that took place in the House of Commons from 2001 to 2009.

In What Congress Thinks of Canada, we turn our attention to the American national legislative body in an attempt to analyze how members of the US Congress perceived Canada in the period from 2001 to 2010. The goal is to provide an objective interpretation of the views espoused by US lawmakers in the Senate and the House of Representatives about Canada and Canadian policy and law. We measure if the views of US lawmakers towards Canada can be regarded as favourable, negative, or ambivalent.

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The Report Card on Secondary Schools in British Columbia and Yukon collects a variety of relevant, objective indicators of school performance into one easily accessible, public document so that all interested parties — parents, school administrators, teachers, students, and taxpayers — can analyze and compare the performance of individual schools. Parents use the Report Card’s indicator values, ratings, and rankings to compare schools when they choose an education provider for their children. Parents and school administrators use the results to identify areas of academic performance in which improvement can be made.

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The Report Card on Ontario’s Secondary Schools 2011 collects a variety of relevant, objective indicators of school performance into one, easily accessible public document so that anyone can analyze and compare the performance of individual schools. By doing so, the Report Card assists parents when they choose a school for their children and encourages and assists all those seeking to improve their schools.

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On March 16, 2011, British Columbia Premier Christy Clark announced her first major policy change, a $2.25 (28.1%) increase to BC’s current $8.00 per hour minimum wage. Controversy surrounds minimum wages because of the tension between well-intentioned efforts to increase incomes for lower income workers and the unfortunate reality of significant economic costs that come with increasing the minimum wage. A general misunderstanding of the types of workers who earn the minimum wage fuel that controversy. This Alert aims to provide British Columbians with an up-to-date account of these realities and an estimate of the economic costs of the recently announced increases to the province’s minimum wage.

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The Canadian tax system is complex and there is no single number that can give us a complete idea of who pays how much tax. That said, the Fraser Institute annually calculates the most comprehensive and easily understood indicator of the overall tax bill of the average Canadian family: Tax Freedom Day. This Alert examines what has happened to the tax bill of the average Canadian family over the past 49 years. To do this, we have constructed an index of the tax bill, the Canadian Consumer Tax Index, for the period 1961 to 2010.

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Canada's Medicare Bubble examines whether the public costs associated with Canada’s health system are economically sustainable. Total provincial health spending has grown at an average annual rate of 7.5% over the last ten years, compared to only 5.7% for total available provincial revenue (including federal transfers), and only 5.2% for GDP. Long-term trends are similar: government spending on health has grown faster on average than GDP since 1975.

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Many proponents of Canada Pension Plan (CPP) reform call for its mandatory expansion, while others have made the case for alternatives. This study examines CPP expansion from an economies-of-scale perspective to assess the potential impact of expansion on the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board’s (CPPIB’s) performance in managing costs and generating returns. The study concludes that diseconomies of scale present a risk to the CPPIB’s investment performance.