Monthly Archives: May 2010

Two Observations About Mexico I Cannot Entirely Explain

I have been in Cancún the past week on my honeymoon (even though we’ve been married for two-and-a-half years – long story). She’s off at the spa, so I thought I’d take this chance to write a blog post. My wife and I took a day trip to Chichén Itzá – if you ever get […]

Visible minorities: diversity in the labour market?

One worthwhile Canadian initiative is the concept of visible minorities. A person is a member of a visible minority if he or she is "non-Caucasian in race or non-white in colour." There is a list. The idea of a visible minority is intimately tied to another worthwhile Canadian initiative: employment equity. Not to be confused […]

Julie Dixon’s alternative to the bank tax

Stephen has already posted on Canada's opposition to the proposed international bank tax. I agree with his main point. There is no way Canadian banks (and their customers and workers, who bear the incidence of that tax) should be paying for failures of other countries' banks, regulated (or not) by other countries' regulators. That just […]

L’Europe et l’alchimie monétaire

Cet article nous est envoyé par Guillaume Nolin, qui participe régulièrement ici sur WCI. Les événements survenus en Grèce au cours des derniers jours nous forcent à nous questionner sur la précarité de notre situation économique. L’image d’une Grèce prodigue, sorte de cigale en préretraite manifestant violemment pour conserver des acquis sociaux illusoires, est certes […]

The Eurozone lender of last resort?

OK. Let's simplify this whole Eurozone mess. Central banks do two things:

The optimal destruction of wolves

This post is not about wolves. Sorry. You are an armed shepherd guarding 16 sheep against circling wolves. There are more wolves than you have bullets. It takes ki wolves to kill one sheep, where ki is the strength of sheep i. The number of wolves is greater than SUM{ki}, so they could kill all […]

The rebound in federal government revenues

The Department of Finance publishes monthly numbers for how much money it has taken in, and how much it has spent. It chooses to run these numbers on the afternoon of the last Friday of the month these days. I'm pretty sure that when the feds were running surpluses, these numbers were released first thing […]

Are we wasting half our hockey talent?

Malcolm Gladwell, in his best-selling book Outliers writes “Those born in the last quarter of the year might as well give up on hockey…” Why? There is …an iron law of Canadian hockey: in any elite group of hockey players – the very best of the best – 40 percent of the players will have […]

Negative and Positive sovereign debt feedback loops

There are two sorts of countries: countries that can print money to pay their sovereign debts; and countries that can't. Canada is a printer; Greece is a non-printer. Both sorts of countries can get into trouble if they issue too much sovereign debt; but they get into very different types of trouble. Printers get into […]

Why Aren’t There More Voluntary Aspirational Taxes?

This probably should be part of my tax series, but I thought I would pose the question to the readership. Provincial and municipal governments are always looking for additional money, but taxes are unpopular and have unpleasant economic side effects. Municipal governments and school boards also need to assign names to roads and schools. Why […]