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| EST. READ TIME 1 MIN.Uneasy Case for Equalization Payments
The federal government contributes about $8 billion of equalization payments to the have not provinces. Huge claims have been made about the virtues of this arrangement. Equalization payments are said to embody some of the great ideals and the great values of Canadians, to mark our compassion as a nation, to be the essence of Canada.
This book casts doubt on these assertions. The Canadian program of equalization payments is examined under the headings of equality, efficiency, and equity, and found wanting in each. Subsidization of have not provinces is not necessarily beneficial to poor people. A program of equalization payments is not necessarily conducive to general prosperity and, in fact, may degenerate into a general scramble among the provinces for transfers from the federal government.
The pros and cons of reform and of the abolition of the equalization program are discussed.
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Dan Usher
Dan Usher is a Professor of economics at Queen's University in Kingston, Ontario. He is the author of The Price Mechanismand the Meaning of National Income Statistics (1969), The Measurement of Economic Growth (1980), The Economic Prerequisite to Democracy (1981), The Welfare Economics of Markets, Voting and Predation (1993) and two volumes of collected papers, National Accounting and Economic Theory and Welfare Economics and Public Finance (1994).On the Canadian scene, Usher has been concerned for some time about the reorganization of English Canada in the event of the separation of Quebec. His papers on this theme include The English Response to the Separation of Quebec, Canadian Public Policy, 1978, HowShould the Redistributive Power of the State be Divided between Federal and Provincial Governments? Canadian Public Policy, 1980, The Design of a Government for an English Canadian Country, in D.D. Purvis ed., Economic Dimensions of Constitutional Change, 1991 and The Interests of English Canada, Canadian Public Policy, 1995.… Read more Read Less…
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