The State of Economics in Canada: Festschrift in Honour of David SlaterAndrew Sharpe, Patrick Grady, David Walker Slater, John Deutsch Institute for the Study of Economic Policy, Queen's University (Kingston, Ont.). School of Policy Studies, Centre for the Study of Living Standards McGill-Queen's University Press, 2001 - 517 pages Each article in this collection addresses a particular field or issue in the discipline of economics and surveys the state of knowledge in this area in Canada, pointing out gaps in the knowledge base and directions for future research. Contributors include Richard Bird (University of Toronto), Robin Boadway (Queen's University), Paul Davenport (University of Western Ontario), Pierre Fortin (University of Quebec at Montreal), Fred Gorbet (York University), Morley Gunderson (University of Toronto), John Helliwell (University of British Columbia), Peter Howitt (Brown University), Katie Macmillan (ITPC), Jack Mintz (C.D. Howe Institute), Ed Nuefeld, Charles Beach (Queen's University), Lars Osberg (Dalhousie University), Sylvia Ostry (University of Toronto), Jim Pesando (CPP-PG), Craig Riddell (University of British Columbia), John Sargent (Department of Finance), Tony Scott (University of Toronto), Michael Smart (University of Toronto), and Tom Wilson (University of Toronto). |
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Page 46
Such externalities can be positive , such as when one province provides public services that benefit residents of neighbouring provinces . These fiscal externalities often provide a basis for policy harmonization and / or federal ...
Such externalities can be positive , such as when one province provides public services that benefit residents of neighbouring provinces . These fiscal externalities often provide a basis for policy harmonization and / or federal ...
Page 48
It would be surprising if different provinces adopted similar structures . The consequence is that from a national point of view , needy persons of a given type in different provinces may face very different standards of redistribution ...
It would be surprising if different provinces adopted similar structures . The consequence is that from a national point of view , needy persons of a given type in different provinces may face very different standards of redistribution ...
Page 51
Not only is that difficult to do with ten to fourteen governments involved , by its nature it implies that such agreements cannot involve any redistribution among provinces . That rules out effective agreements involving national equity ...
Not only is that difficult to do with ten to fourteen governments involved , by its nature it implies that such agreements cannot involve any redistribution among provinces . That rules out effective agreements involving national equity ...
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Contents
Pensions | 4 |
An Economist for All Seasons | 19 |
Tax Policy and Tax Research in Canada | 57 |
Copyright | |
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analysis assets average banks benefits Canada Canadian capital cent changes citizens compared competition consumption contributions corporate costs countries David developing developing countries discussion distribution domestic earnings economic economists effects efficiency employment equalization equity estimates evidence example expenditure federal Figure Finance fiscal fund future gains graduates groups growth higher households impact important income tax increase individuals industry institutions interest investment issues labour less living lower major marginal measures moving noted Ontario participation payroll pension percentage period plans political population poverty productivity programs provinces recent reduce reform relative Report responsibility retirement savings seniors share significant social standards studies Table tax rates taxation Toronto trade transfers United University workers