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Latest Research |
Comparing Median Employment Income in the Atlantic Region to the Rest of Canada is a new study that focuses on Atlantic Canada compared to central and western Canada, and finds that the average median employment income in Atlantic Canada in 2019 was $32,175 while in central and western Canada the average median employment income was $37,583—16.8 per cent higher.
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Lockdown: A Final Assessment spotlights how government lockdowns during the pandemic did little to reduce COVID deaths yet imposed widespread economic and social costs including an increase in deaths not directly linked to COVID.
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Why Did Jurisdictions Repeatedly Use Inefficient Lockdowns During the COVID-19 Pandemic? examines the behaviour of governments who enacted and enforced lockdown policies they knew were ineffective and/or misguided.
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ESG Is Mainly Top-Down Planning by Elites is a new essay in the Institute’s series on the Environmental, Social and Governance movement. In it, adjunct scholar Matt Lau details how the refocus of business and financial activity toward ESG concerns has been pushed from above by government bodies and politically powerful organizations at the expense of individual investors.
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Commentary and Blog Posts |
(Appeared in the Financial Post) by Kenneth P. Green
The pursuit of a rapid energy transition is causing massive environmental degradation.
(Appeared in the Calgary Sun) by Tegan Hill and Bacchus Barua
Patients in the province faced a median wait of 33.3 weeks between seeing a general practitioner and receiving treatment.
(Appeared in the Hamilton Spectator) by Michael Zwaagstra
The Toronto school board wants to lift the “veil of objectivity” from mathematics.
(Appeared in the Ottawa Sun) by Matthew Lau
Due to Liberal government reforms in the 1990s, per-person program spending dropped by 15.5 per cent.
by Ben Eisen
The provincial budget forecasts a large increase in debt over the next few years relative to the size of the economy.
by Livio Di Matteo
Without accompanying business investment, an increased labour supply will lead to lower per-capita income growth.
(Appeared in True North) by Michael Zwaagstra
Sir John A. Macdonald’s name and likeness is rapidly disappearing from the public square.
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