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The Canadian Education Freedom Index draws attention to the powerful role our provincial governments play in creating or obstructing educational freedom.

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Many Canadians see motor vehicle ownership and operation as a necessity of modern life. For example, usages rates (the ratio of drivers to population) are very high, averaging over 90 percent for most driving age groups.

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The Canadian government needs to abolish pharmaceutical price controls, increase competition amongst drug makers by allowing advertising, stop the gray market in prescription drugs from Canada to the United States, and take other steps to improve pharmaceutical regulation, according to John R. Graham, Director, Health and Pharmaceutical Policy Research at The Fraser Institute. Graham testified before the House of Commons Standing Committee on Health in Vancouver on September 29.

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This report is a first attempt at quantifying labour-market performance and the characteristics that affect it across Canadian provinces and US states. It includes comprehensive measures of how well labour markets across Canada and the US have performed over the last five years and critical characteristics such as unionization rates and public-sector employment rates, which affect performance.

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Increasingly, the debate over climate change is moving from alarmist global climate predictions, to alarmist regional climate predictions-reports purporting to predict the future climate impacts of rising greenhouse gas concentration on specific regions of the Earth, and calling for a laundry list of regulations long-favoured by old-school environmentalists.

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This 7th global economic freedom report, by James Gwartney and Robert Lawson, ranks 123 nations for 2001, the most recent year for which data are available. The report also updates data in earlier reports in instances where data have been revised. 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 charge of their own future.Empirical research shows this spurs economic growth by unleashing dynamism. It also leads to democracy and other freedoms as people are unfettered from government dependence.

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The genesis of this book was a Fraser Institute conference on democratic reform in November 2001. This, in turn, was inspired by the evident openness of the new government of British Columbia (elected in May of 2001) to consider these topics. Indeed, one of the first measures of that government was to pass legislation providing for fixed-term elections (with exceptions in case of defeat on a confidence motion).