Category Canadian economy
Ontario’s Recession Battered Families
Recessions generate many statistics but in the end its all about the people and their families. Statistics Canada today released family income data for sub-provincial areas for 2009 taken from the 2009 personal income tax returns.
Debt and bi-modal demographics
Young people borrow, to finance school, house, car, and kids. Their debt reaches a maximum, somewhere around age 35. Then they start to pay off their debt, and save for retirement, and so reach a maximum stock of savings somewhere around age 65. So, if there were a big bulge in the population at around […]
Transfer Dependency’s New Friends
Well, I decided to finish off my postings on provincial revenues and go to the Federal Fiscal Reference Tables which provide a federal transfer revenue variable for each province from 1987/87 to 2009/10 as well as provincial revenues. I have a plot of nominal per capita transfer revenues and not surprisingly it shows an upward […]
Canadian mortgage debt
I feel bad about writing too many abstruse theory posts. How many angels can dance on the head of a monetary pin? Here's something more practical. Think of it as a companion to Livio's post about Canadian house prices. Why would we worry if Canadian house prices are overvalued? One important reason (though not the […]
Are Canada’s Housing Markets Overvalued?
Bank of Canada Governor Mark Carney is going to be in Vancouver on Wednesday June 15th to deliver a speech on the country’s housing market. There is a lot of interest as to whether or not the housing market is overvalued so I thought I would take a look at housing prices and markets using […]
The sources of the Canadian recession and recovery
This is one of those posts where I present data in graph form so that people – in particular, I – can get a feel for what's been happening. Today's entry is on how the various components of aggregate demand contributed to the recession and recovery. We sometimes get too focused on the particularities of […]
Provincial Revenues: Another View
Well, in response to a comment in my last post asking how much variation in per capita revenues there is across the provinces, I've provided a graph of real per capita revenues (1997 dollars) for each province for the period 1975 to 2008 with the data that was used to compile the average and median […]
A Strong Dollar?
American economic policy debate has recently taken turns familiar to Canadians – health care sustainability, debts and deficits, and most recently, the value of the dollar.
Cities, Capital Cities and Economic Performance
It is the conventional wisdom that urban centers with their concentrations of human and physical capital and their dense social networks are engines of growth. One exception to this is can be the case where a dominant urban center by virtue of its institutional monopoly on a country or region’s economic life is able to […]
As the Border turns: Cross-Border Shopping Revisited
According to a report in the May 11th edition of the Globe and Mail, the U.S. government is pressing the Canadian federal government to loosen the rules so that fewer Canadians have to stop and pay duties as they return from a trip to the United States: “The personal exemption issue has been formally raised […]
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