Category: Canada

Alberta Election Platform Analysis

Alberta’s provincial election is April 16th, just a little less than two weeks away.  New Democratic Party leader and Premier Rachel Notley is squaring off against former federal Conservative cabinet minister Jason Kenney, who leads the United Conservative Party (UCP). The UCP has (almost) ended the split on the right between the Conservatives and the Wildrose Party that was partially responsible for ending over forty years of Conservative rule following the 2015 election.  Notley has been given a hard task

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Budget 2019 Commentary

Good morning all. Here’s your 2019 Budget Commentary ready for your review, brought to you through a globe-spanning collaboration between the team at HESA Towers and your humble correspondent pulling an all-nighter in the Arbat. We hope you enjoy it. As has usually been the case with budgets in this government, Budget 2019 is largely friendly to PSE with mostly good intentions but often only half-thought through ideas on implementation. Let’s start with the unambiguously good investments; namely, those for Indigenous

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What to Look for in Tonight’s Budget

At 4 PM EST, Finance Minister Bill Morneau will rise in the House of Commons to deliver his fourth budget, and the last one before a federal election in the fall.  What can we expect from the budget on the big PSE-files?  Here’s a quick rundown. Transfer Payments: Status quo. Research: My guess is that there are small goodies in this budget, if only to give them an excuse to reprint everything they did last year in this year’s budget

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Strange, Inconsistent Arguments for Free Tuition

Every few weeks, it seems, someone shows up on twitter just aching to serve me some dubious justification for free tuition.   Let me recount two recent favourites. The first is the “oh but progressive taxation argument”.  It goes like this: Me: “You know universal subsidies for higher education are regressive, right?  On account of how the take-up rate for higher education – the likelihood of attending, the length of attendance, etc. – is positively correlated with family socio-economic status”?  (check back to

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“Consulting and Advising”, Ottawa-style

I received a note from someone in a federal ministry in Ottawa a couple of weeks ago.  It asked, would I be interested in having dinner with Minister (name withheld)?  You know, look into new policy initiatives, want to talk to a few experts, break bread together etc.  Sounds like fun, I said.  But you know that, for my sins, I live in Toronto, right?  Not Ottawa. Would this dinner invitation come with an airline ticket attached, or was I

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