Category Livio Di Matteo
A Very Brief History of Demand and Supply
I’m teaching History of Economic Thought again this year and during my progression through the material this term what has struck me is the very long road over time –literally hundreds of years – to understanding markets and value as the simultaneous interaction both supply and demand side factors culminating in the standard diagram of […]
The Fuss Over TFSAs
Well, there seems to be a fair amount of fuss over the proposed doubling of the contribution limit to Tax Free Savings Accounts(TFSAs). Kevin Milligan says the case for raising the annual TFSA limit is shaky as the benefit will be mostly to high wealth households rather than those at the middle or bottom of […]
Canadian Convergence
Mark Brown and Ryan MacDonald at Statistics Canada have just released a Research Paper on Canadian provincial convergence and divergence of per capita household disposable income from 1926 to 2011. They find that while there has been convergence over time, it has proceeded in fits and starts with periods of external shock such as the […]
Is Poloz Pulling down the Loonie?
Bank of Canada Governor Stephen Poloz insists he is not talking down the Canadian dollar and its depreciation relative to the US dollar is the result of economic developments – in particular the fall in oil prices. So is oil driving down the dollar? How about a quick and dirty regression?
Another Canadian Debt Ranking
Statistics Canada has released provisional estimates of the Canadian Government Finance Statistics (CGFS) for financial flows and the balance sheets of general government and government business enterprises for the period 2007 to 2012. The net liabilities per capita picture for provincial and territorial governments has changed since the 2008 global financial crisis.
Ontario Finances Not Quite On Target This Year
As Ontario moves into budget season, it is instructive to take a quick look at the finances to date as revealed in the most recent Ontario Economic Outlook and Fiscal Review which was presented November 2014. Ontario’s aim then as no doubt now was to have the budget balanced by 2017-18. According to the Review, […]
When Tax Opportunity Knocks…
It looks like the respite from falling oil prices for consumers at the pump has finally attracted the attention of government. Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne has been reported as saying Ontario will unveil a carbon-pricing scheme this spring. While the idea of a carbon tax in Ontario has been on the agenda since at least […]
Comparing Manufacturing Employment Growth: Canada and the USA
According to the employment numbers just released, the United States is doing quite well with the preliminary Bureau of Labour Statistics numbers pointing to the addition of 252,000 jobs in December and an unemployment rate now at 5.6 percent. Meanwhile, Canada exhibited a much weaker performance with Statistics Canada reporting that Canada lost 4,300 jobs […]
Saving Ontario
Here is an entertaining story to ring in the New Year. Apparently, Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne in an interview in her Queen’s Park office says that Ontario is “ready to shield Canada from the economic tsunami caused by declining oil prices and a sinking dollar.” According to the Premier, Ontario’s manufacturing heartland is gearing up […]
Economic Superiority
Marion Fourcade, Etienne Ollion and Yann Algan have penned a Max Plank SciencesPo discussion paper on the traits of the economics profession. In The Superiority of Economists, the authors write: “Taken together, these traits constitute what we call the superiority of economists, where economists’ objective supremacy is intimately linked with their subjective sense of authority […]
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