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Expanding government won’t help Canada’s recovery
Enough signals have been sent by the federal government over the last few weeks for Canadians to formulate reasonable expectations about the upcoming throne speech next month and what might be included in the government’s plan for ...
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Who's better having the money—governments or individual Canadians
Appeared in the Financial Post, January 17, 2018 Much, if not all policy debates, ultimately boil down to a single fundamental question—is the city, province or country, and more specifically its residents, better off having more or less of their income. ...
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Chrétien Consensus begins in Saskatchewan under the NDP
This is the first of several blog posts based on the recently released book the End of the Chrétien Consensus?, which chronicles the emergence and success of the policies of this era as well as the move away from these policies over the ...
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Why waste a budget? Trudeau should learn from Chretien and Martin
Appeared in National Newswatch, March 18, 2016 As Prime Minister Trudeau delivers his first budget next week, one that reportedly contains a deficit in excess of $30 billion, his government may want to consider the lessons learned by former Prime Minister ...
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End of the Chretien Consensus in Canada?
Appeared in the Financial Post, November 24, 2015 Canada enjoyed an economic and fiscal renaissance starting in the mid-1990s that lasted more than a decade. The boom was rooted in sound fiscal policy (balanced budgets, focused spending, and tax ...
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Conservatives’ economic vision for Canada is hardly conservative
Appeared in the Financial Post As expected, the 2015 federal budget had the general feel of an election budget, with a small surplus and a smattering of initiatives to satisfy various voting groups. As Liberal leader Justin Trudeau noted in the House of ...
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Is there any wonder why Ontario is in the state it's in?
Appeared in the Financial Post As Ontario continues to undermine its economic future with growing debt, the province does not receive near the critical scrutiny it should from the media and financial markets. In reading CIBC World Markets latest Economic ...
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Federal Liberals reject the party's successful pragmatism of the 1990s
Appeared in the Ottawa Citizen, New Brunswick Telegraph Journal and Flin Flon Reminder The policy direction of the Liberal Party of Canada and its leader Justin Trudeau, as evidenced by the speeches, motions, and debate at the recent national party ...
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Federal Government Failure in Canada, 2013 Edition: A review of the Auditor General's reports, 1988-2013
The discussion of the limitations of government and subsequent government failure is wholly absent from debate in Canada where, unfortunately, we still assume that governments act benevolently and without institutional constraints. That this is not true ...
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Federalism and Fiscal Transfers: Essays on Australia, Germany, Switzerland, and the United States
Federalism and Fiscal Transfers is a series of essays by regional experts examining the experience of four other federalist countries-- Australia, Germany, Switzerland, and the United States-- and how they transfer revenues from the federal government to ...