Printer-friendly version

Economic and political relations between Canada and the United States, our most important foreign relationship, have worsened since the Fraser Institute’s previous report on the state of Canada-US relations, Skating on Thin Ice (Moens, 2010).

Printer-friendly version

Equalization is a federal transfer program that is explicitly designed to subsidize provinces with weak own-source revenues and to be politically unifying. However, the flip in Ontario’s status from a “have” to a “have-not” province has had, and will continue to have, profound consequences for the country as a whole.

Printer-friendly version

Living wage laws are a relatively new policy that gained prominence in American cities starting in the mid-1990s. Currently more than 140 American municipalities have a living wage law. In 2011, the City of New Westminster in British Columbia became the first and only Canadian city to adopt a living wage ordinance. This report reviews the scholarly research on living wage laws from the United States.

Printer-friendly version

Although markets are the ideal method of resource allocation, government serves a necessary and important function, providing programs and services that affect our quality of life in numerous ways. However, as government spending has grown over the past 100 years, both in terms of spending per person and as a share of the economy, it has become clear that bigger government is not always better government. In fact, numerous studies have found there is a negative relationship between government size and economic growth. Given the mushrooming number of services provided by government, taxpayers deserve to know what kind of value they are getting for their money. Toward that end, this study analyzes the size, growth, efficiency, and cost-effectiveness of government across 34 OECD countries and develops a measure for public sector efficiency it dubs the “cost-effectiveness index.” The results reveal that the most efficient public sector is found in South Korea, followed by Luxembourg, Switzerland, Australia, Norway, Chile, Mexico, Canada, the United States, and Japan. At the other end of the spectrum are Poland, Portugal, Greece, Hungary, and Turkey.

Printer-friendly version

The study measures donations to registered charities claimed on personal income tax returns in Canada’s 10 provinces and three territories, the 50 U.S. states and Washington, D.C.

Printer-friendly version

This is the ninth edition of the annual report, Economic Freedom of North America. The results of this year’s study confirm those published in the previous eight editions: economic freedom is a powerful driver of growth and prosperity. Those provinces and states that have low levels of economic freedom continue to leave their citizens poorer than they need or should be.

Printer-friendly version
Ever Higher-Government spending on Canada's Aboriginals since 1947

This study provides a fact-based look at the claim that public spending on Canada’s Aboriginal population is inadequate. It does so by examining actual spending on Aboriginal Canadians using four sources: the federal department of Aboriginal Affairs and Northern Development Canada, Health Canada, Employment and Social Development Canada, and provincial governments.