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The new Ontario Health Premium as described in the 2004 Ontario budget is not structured like a true insurance premium. Normal health-insurance premiums, like those used to finance life, automobile, and home insurance, are designed to cover the cost of all expected future benefit payments to members of an insurance plan. Insurance premiums, therefore, are designed to link the expected use of insurance benefits to the future cost of providing those benefits and, thereby, partially create a financial incentive for the insured to avoid making claims unless absolutely necessary.

But Ontario's new Health Premium does not link health-care costs to a person's potential use of the system. Instead, the new premium is partially linked to a person's income level and capped at a maximum dollar amount within selected income groups. In fact, it is estimated that nearly 4 million people will not have to pay it all. The new premium will have no effect on making health-care consumers more responsible about their demands for medical services in Ontario because it will not link the cost of care to an individual's use of care prospectively, retrospectively, or at the point of service. Therefore, it will have no impact on controlling the demonstrably unsustainable growth in the costs of the health system. Furthermore, because the new premium is not fully indexed to the expected growth in government spending on health care, it will not cover the additional future costs of health care and is, therefore, an inadequate means of making public financing more sustainable over the long term.

If the new premium is expected to make an effective contribution to the sustainability of public health-care financing, the structure of the premium will have to be changed in the future. The new premium could be linked to an individual's potential use (risk rating) or actual use (experience rating) of the system as is done with all other types of insurance premiums. However, both of these approaches to health-care financing will be politically unacceptable as long as the public favours the redistribution of costs on the basis of income instead of use. Furthermore, on their own, these types of measures are not fully capable of reducing the over-use of healthcare. As private-sector insurers have discovered, a combination of risk- and experience-rated premiums as well as front-end deductibles or other forms of user charges and co-payments are necessary to make the insured behave responsibly when demanding the benefits of insurance.

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The key ingredients of economic freedom are personal choice, voluntary exchange, freedom to compete, and protection of the person and property. Economic freedom liberates individuals and families from government dependence and gives them control of their own future. Empirical research shows this spurs economic growth by unleashing individual dynamism. It also leads to democracy and other freedoms as people are unfettered from government dependence.

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Computerized models of the earth's climate are at the heart of the debate over how policy should respond to climate change. Global climate models (GCMs)--also called general circulation models -- attempt to predict future climatic conditions starting with a set of assumptions about how the climate works and guesses about what a future world might look like in terms of population, energy use, technological development, and so on.

Analysts have pointed out, however, that many of the assumptions used in modeling the climate are of dubious merit, with biases that tend to project catastrophic warming, and have argued that climate models have many limitations that make them unsuitable as the basis for developing public policy. This paper examines two major limitations that hinder the usefullness of climate models to those forming public policy.

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The Report Card on British Columbia's Elementary Schools: 2004 Edition collects a variety of relevant, objective indicators of school performance into one, accessible document so that anyone can analyze and compare the performance of individual schools. The Report Card assists parents choose a school for their children and encourages and assists all those seeking to improve their schools.

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The 2004 Ontario budget has proven to be a watershed event. After months of floating policy trial balloons, the government has finally committed to a four-year fiscal plan. This Alert assesses the new fiscal plan in the light of the prior Progressive Conservative government's two terms in office, also initially devoted to deficit reduction but with a greater emphasis on tax cuts.

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The net direct debt of all three levels of government in Canada fell from $847 billion to $789 billion between 1997/98 and 2001/02. This is a small drop compared to the growth in debt over the last decade: it was only $533 billion in 1990/91.

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This paper raises several issues that have the cumulative effect of suggesting that in the long term, the prohibition on marijuana cannot be sustained with the present technology of production and enforcement. To anyone with even a passing acquaintance with modern history, it is apparent that we are reliving the experience of alcohol prohibition of the early years of the last century.