The State of Economics in Canada: Festschrift in Honour of David SlaterAndrew Sharpe, Patrick Grady, 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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Results 1-3 of 57
Page 161
... Figure 1 and Figure 2 the double vertical line divides the total population into the proportion aged 65 or more and the fraction under 65. Graphically , if one wants to look only at poverty among younger Canadians , one can simply cover ...
... Figure 1 and Figure 2 the double vertical line divides the total population into the proportion aged 65 or more and the fraction under 65. Graphically , if one wants to look only at poverty among younger Canadians , one can simply cover ...
Page 174
... Figure 6 uses the relative concept that the poverty line is one - half the median equivalent income of all persons , while Figure 7 adopts the absolute poverty line methodology of the U.S. Social Security Administration ( converted to ...
... Figure 6 uses the relative concept that the poverty line is one - half the median equivalent income of all persons , while Figure 7 adopts the absolute poverty line methodology of the U.S. Social Security Administration ( converted to ...
Page 392
... ( Figure 4 ) . This is two points higher than the 1961-74 pre - wage explosion average of 90 per cent . Figure 7 brings additional supporting evidence from unemployment behaviour . The average unemployment - rate gap between the two ...
... ( Figure 4 ) . This is two points higher than the 1961-74 pre - wage explosion average of 90 per cent . Figure 7 brings additional supporting evidence from unemployment behaviour . The average unemployment - rate gap between the two ...
Contents
Overview of the Festschrift | 3 |
Pensions | 4 |
An Economist for All Seasons | 19 |
Copyright | |
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after-tax analysis assets average bachelor's benefits Boadway British Columbia budget C.D. Howe Institute Canada Pension Plan Canadian financial Canadian Tax capital gains cent changes citizens clawbacks competition consumption tax contributions costs CPP/QPP David David Slater decentralization developing countries distribution domestic Economic Council economists effective tax rates efficiency elderly employment environmental equity expenditure federal government financial system Financing Confederation fiscal fiscal federalism globalization graduates growth higher impact important increase industry investment issues measures Mintz mobility OECD Ontario Ottawa paper payroll taxes Pension Plan pillar political population poverty intensity poverty line prime age households productivity programs provinces Quebec ratio recent redistribution reduction relative retirement savings revenues RRSP sector senior households share Slater social Statistics Canada studies Table tax policy tax system taxation taxation in Canada Toronto trade trend United University workers