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Latest Research |
Stimulating Economic Growth Through Abundant Energy finds that access to affordable, abundant energy promotes economic growth and could help Canada recover from the COVID recession. In particular, a ten per cent increase in energy use is associated with a 1.16 per cent increase in GDP. Critically, Canada’s economic growth over the past decade was already weaker than several other developed countries including the United States, Germany, Japan, and the whole G7 group of economies, on average.
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Changes in the Affordability of Housing in Canadian and American Cities, 2006–2016 is a new study that measures changes in housing affordability—shelter costs as a share of income—over a 10-year period in 396 cities in Canada and the United States. Crucially, while affordability increased by an average of 10.5 per cent for the 344 American metropolitan areas included in the analysis, housing affordability actually decreased by 7.6 per cent, on average, in the 52 Canadian metropolitan areas over the same 10-year period. Put differently, while the majority of U.S. cities included in the analysis simultaneously experienced population and income growth and increasing housing affordability, Canada’s largest cities—while experiencing
similar population and income growth—became less affordable to live in.
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Commentary and Blog Posts |
by Jason Clemens, Milagros Palacios, and Niels Veldhuis
The government increased income taxes for more than 80 per cent of middle-income families.
by Jason Clemens, Milagros Palacios, and Niels Veldhuis
Excluding residential investment, business investment dropped 17.3 per cent.
(Appeared in the National Post) by Jason Clemens, Milagros Palacios, and Nathaniel Li
The CERB will now cost an estimated $73.1 billion.
(Appeared in the Calgary Sun) by Robert P. Murphy
Canada has pledged to reduce emissions by 30 per cent by 2030.
by Ben Eisen
In 1990, Ontario’s debt-to-GDP ratio stood at 13 per cent.
(Appeared in National Newswatch) by Jake Fuss and Alex Whalen
Government workers receive 9.4 per cent more, on average, in wages than Canadians in the private sector.
by Tegan Hill
Indigenous and Northern Affairs represented the largest share of federal program spending growth.
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