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The current Critical Issues Bulletin is the Institute's sixth attempt to document the extent to which queues are being used as a means of adapting to the conflict between limited budgetary allocations and potentially unlimited demand for free health care.

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Is there a reason for continued state ownership of BC Hydro? Is a monopoly still necessary and desirable for electric utilities?

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This book focuses on the health care system in Canada along two sight lines. The first is evidence from other countries about how their health care systems are functioning and what reforms they are pursuing. The second is the requirements for policy change in Canada, using the province of British Columbia to illustrate many specific policy details. The reform proposals that emerge are intended to provide a restructuring of incentives to ensure that the choices made by system participants are economic in the sense that they reflect the alternative uses to which resources might be put.

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This is the second in The Fraser Institute series on crime in Canada. The purpose of this primer is to describe the kinds of crime to which Canadians are exposed, who is at risk for those crimes, who commits them, some of the costs the victims face, and some of the expenditures we make to prevent crime. To understand what changes we may want to make in our criminal justice system, it is important to see the overall patterns of crime and punishment, how they have evolved and what they have cost.

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The central elements of economic freedom are personal choice, protection of private property, and freedom of exchange. The goal of this study is to construct an index that is (a) a good indicator of economic freedom across countries and (b) based on objective components that can be updated regularly and used to track future changes in economic freedom.

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This well-documented analysis traces the effects of Ontario's 10-year liberalization of welfare benefits and eligibility. The liberalization was intended to give recipients a sense of independence, thereby helping them move into the workforce. However, as Welfare-No Fair demonstrates, rather than reducing caseloads and encouraging independence, Ontario went from being the province with the fewest recipients per capita to the province with the most. As caseloads grew dramatically, more and more families became entangled in the so-called safety net.

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This revised edition of Poverty in Canada is a provocative challenge to current approaches to defining and measuring poverty. It includes an update section with new data for all the key tables along with an accompanying commentary. Like the first edition, it argues that prevailing estimates greatly exaggerate the number of poor; that Statistics Canada's low income cut-off - the standard tool used in virtually all studies measuring poverty - is badly flawed and that social assistance, in almost all cases, is perfectly adequate in covering all basic needs.