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Provincial Economic Freedom in Canada 1981-1998
by Faisal Arman, Dexter Samida, and Michael Walker
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Introduction
Most people prefer to choose for themselves. This
indicates that freedom, including economic freedom, has intrinsic value. Adam Smith noted
that human beings have a natural inclination to "truck and barter." Restrictions
on the freedom to choose and engage in voluntary exchange deny human beings something they
value--something that is an integral part of their humanity. In addition, economic theory
indicates that economic freedom affects incentives, productive effort, and the
effectiveness of resource use
--Gwartney, Lawson, and Block 1996
Modern governments are under increasing pressure to change,
to remedy years of inefficient bureaucracy, and to open their borders and markets.
Although these demands often come in the form of requests for lower taxes or a less
onerous regulatory burden, the common thread underlying these requests is a need for more
economic freedom. Those governments that respond positively to this appeal enable their
citizens to grow prosperous in the age of the global economy while those who do not will
relegate those under their jurisdiction to a decreasing relative standard of living.
Traditional Keynesian economic analysis has suggested a
large and varied role for government in the economy. For many years, this has been the
dominant view among economists and policy makers. Fortunately, it appears that this tide
is reversing. As our understanding of economics advances, it becomes clearer that the
market is more than just an anonymous process by which rewards and punishments are
distributed. Those who criticize the market and favour government intervention seem
implicitly to argue that these impersonal forces are a zero sum game--one person must lose
for another to gain. What these commentators ignore is the role that the market plays in
increasing the welfare of all participants, not only those in the upper echelons. When
participants are allowed to trade something of personal value for something of greater
personal value, they increase their welfare. This is true whether the trade is apples for
oranges or labour for wages.
"[F]reedom to choose, supply resources, compete in
business, and trade with others is a central ingredient--perhaps the fundamental
element--of economic progress" (Gwartney, Lawson, and Block 1996). History has
provided ample evidence that economic freedom sparks and maintains economic growth but
opinion remains divided as to whether government intervention, once society rises past
some level of economic well-being, is helpful or destructive to further economic progress.
In the past, evaluating the relationship between economic freedom and economic growth was
nearly impossible due to the lack of an objective definition of economic freedom and a
means by which to measure it (The Economist 1996). Recent empirical research published
jointly by The Fraser Institute and 53 research institutes in 53 countries in Economic
Freedom of the World 1975-1995, Economic Freedom of the World 1997: Annual Report and
Economic Freedom of the World: 1998/1999 Interim Report has gone a long way in filling
those gaps. This annual examination of economic freedom provides detailed definitions of
the components of economic freedom and a quantified analysis of economic freedom in 115
countries over a 25-year period. The research provides strong evidence that countries with
greater economic freedom achieved not only greater economic growth but also higher
per-capita gross domestic product (GDP). Per-capita GDP is a useful indicator of the
relative income level of individuals within an economy. The validity of the study is
supported by data across a wide enough range of countries and over a long enough period of
time to test the credibility of the link between freedom and prosperity. It is clear that
economic freedom is the way in which a country grows and its citizens become affluent.
As a point of note, for 1990 to 1997 Canada was ranked the
sixth freest economy in the world. Countries with consistently higher levels of economic
freedom than our own have delivered greater economic benefits to their citizens and, by
restricting economic freedom, we have done more than limit individuals' choices; we have
also removed a piece of their livelihood through a reduction in economic growth. While
Canada remains at virtually the same level of economic freedom, other countries are taking
the lead in increasing economic freedom.
Object of the Index
Provincial Economic Freedom in Canada, 1981-1998 was
modeled on the research done for the various issues of Economic Freedom of the World.
Several components of this world-wide index were re-engineered to measure levels of
economic freedom among the Canadian provinces. The object of Provincial Economic Freedom
in Canada is twofold. First, it defines economic freedom and illuminates the intricate
pattern of restrictions that provincial governments can impose upon economic freedom.
Second, it shows the extent to which these intrusions exist in each of the provinces as
well as the direction these restrictions in freedom take over time. By using empirical
data provided by Statistics Canada and other statistics-gathering organizations over a
period of sufficient length, we show clearly the importance that individual provinces have
placed on either enhancing or inhibiting economic freedom.
Impositions upon economic freedom are not blatantly obvious
in the developed economies of the world. Constraints on economic freedom in the Canadian
provinces exist in a wide range of policies and regulations embedded in the dictates of
government. The effects of such violations are less evident in Canada than elsewhere due
to the huge endowment of resources in our country and a corresponding capacity to bear all
kinds of economic inefficiencies without their adverse impact being felt (Easton and
Walker 1992). Economic restrictions should not, therefore, be of less interest to the
population as these endowments are only valuable inasmuch as they provide for the
well-being of society. When government squanders our resources with red tape, present
society and future generations suffer economic losses. This study breaks ground in
cataloging these restrictions and providing a ranking for each of the Canadian provinces.
The results and statistical analyses provide ample proof that economic freedom is
something that we should maintain and increase.
Definition of Economic Freedom
In its simplest form, economic freedom involves the freedom
to make choices, freedom of exchange, and protection of private property. "When
economic freedom is present, individuals are free to make economic choices such as how to
use their time and other resources, what goods to consume, and what business and
investment alternatives to pursue" (Gwartney and Lawson 1997: 2; see also Gwartney,
Lawson, and Block 1996). Any impediment to the exercise of these rights as a consequence
of intervention by government is a violation of economic freedom. The freest of economies
will operate with a minimal amount of government interference, relying upon personal
choice and markets to answer basic economic questions such as what is to be produced, how
much is to be produced, and for whom production is intended. Governments in such economies
show a healthy respect for the competitive markets and their outcomes.
In an economically free society, the government has two
main functions. The first is the protective function.
A government's protective function seeks to prevent
individuals from physically harming the person or property of another and to maintain an
infrastructure of rules within which people can interact peacefully. The crucial
ingredients of this infrastructure include the enforcement of contracts and the avoidance
of restrictions, regulations and differential or excessive taxes that would restrain
exchange (Gwartney, Lawson, and Block 1996: 22).
The second function of government
involves the provision of public goods--goods that have two
distinguishing characteristics: (1) supplying them to one individual simultaneously makes
them available to others, and (2) it is difficult, if not impossible, to restrict their
consumption to paying customers only (Gwartney, Lawson, and Block 1996: 22).
Consumer choice and economic freedom is restricted when
governments move beyond the supply of public goods and the protection of persons and
property into the provision of private goods. Governments in Canada, like those in most
modern states, have unprecedented control of private production, the operation of
enterprises, and the protection of government firms from the discipline of competition.
They also impose price controls and initiate numerous other expenditures and regulatory
activities having little to do with the protection of property rights or the provision of
public goods.
Given the sheer number of government operations and
regulations, precise measurement of all governmental activities is an impossible task.
Provincial Economic Freedom in Canada evaluates 11 components (see Exhibit 1) and provides
insight into the relationship between government activity and economic freedom in several
important areas. While at this stage of development the components are not exhaustive,
they do provide a credible indication of the degree to which government policies have had
an impact on provincial economic freedom.
Click Here to View Exhibit 1: Areas
and Components of the Index of Provincial Economic Freedom and the Weights Assigned to
Each
Components of the Index
The eleven components of the index of provincial economic
freedom are divided among four major areas: I. Government Operations and Regulations; II.
Takings and Discriminatory Taxation; III. Interprovincial Trade; and IV. Labour Market
Regulations. A scale from zero to 10 was used to rate each component in the index. Ten is
the highest possible score and indicates relatively high economic freedom while a score of
zero is the lowest a jurisdiction can receive. Many of the components and definitions are
adapted from the three editions of Economic Freedom of the World (Gwartney, Lawson, and
Block 1996; Gwartney and Lawson 1997; Gwartney and Lawson 1998).
I. Government Operations and Regulations
I(a). General Consumption Expenditures by Government
as a Percentage of GDP
Government operations and regulations in the economy have
an impact on consumer choice and economic freedom. The two broad functions of government
consistent with economic freedom are limited to its protective capacities and its role in
providing public goods. Most modern governments have ventured far beyond these functions
and involve themselves in the direction of private production, the operation of
businesses, the protection of government firms from the discipline of competition (both
through the creation of monopolies and by subsidizing losses of government firms), the
imposition of price controls, the redistribution of income and wealth, and numerous other
discriminatory expenditures and regulatory activities. All these activities are contrary
to economic freedom and are a burden to society.
Provincial governments have the authority to take a portion
of an individual's income (through taxation) and either to transfer it to others or to use
it to operate enterprises or agencies. Further, provincial governments have the power to
set prices, limit entry into markets and occupations (through the establishment of
marketing boards and regulation of professions and industries), mandate the provision of
services by private parties (usually businesses), and impose any number of other
regulations on individuals or businesses.
When consumption expenditures by government increase as a
share of GDP, political expedience is substituted for market decisions and coordination.
All things being equal, more public spending means less spending by individuals and
households. "As government expenditures increase, more and more of these expenditures
tend to be channelled toward activities outside of the protective and productive functions
of government" (Gwartney, Lawson, and Block 1996: 23). As government begins to take
over more portions of the economy, there is almost always a loss of efficiency. Research
in progress at The Fraser Institute suggests that once government revenue is above
approximately 30 percent of GDP there are substantial economic costs to the economy.
Canadian governments have been above this level for decades. The complicated coordination
of prices and output that the market handles free of charge requires an expensive
bureaucracy to operate when it is under the auspices of a government organization.
For the last two decades, expenditures by provincial and
local governments have been rising faster than the nominal GDP. Within total expenditures,
there have been trends in the relative importance of the type of expenditure. Government
expenditures fall under two broad categories: exhaustive and distributive. Exhaustive
spending encompasses expenditures such as consumption spending and capital
formation--e.g., varied services such as education, health care, and police protection.
Distributive spending encompasses such expenditures as interest on the public debt and
transfers to businesses and persons. In real terms, expenditure on goods and services,
both consumption and capital, has grown slower than GDP over the past two decades.
Government operations such as transfers to persons and businesses, and interest on the
public debt have been growing much faster in real terms than GDP. This suggests that
governments have been increasingly willing to abandon their traditional role and pursue
other objectives. This shift has had negative consequences for economic freedom and
economic well-being.
For most measurement years, the index uses total provincial
government expenditures as a percentage of GDP from the Provincial Economic Accounts. The
1996 measure of this component uses the 1996 Financial Management System (FMS) data
provided by Statistics Canada. Total provincial government expenditures (as measured by
FMS accounts) as a percentage of GDP was used. This was used because the 1996 Provincial
Economic Accounts data was not available when the index was being compiled.
Data Source : System of National
Accounts, Provincial Economic Accounts, Annual Estimates disk version (1961-1996),
Statistics Canada, Catalogue No. 13-213.
I(b). Size of Government-Operated Enterprises and
Debt Guarantees as a Percentage of GDP
A government-operated business enterprise represents the
substitution of political coercion for market decision-making. Government enterprises are
fundamentally different from private businesses. Their start-up capital is coercively
appropriated from taxpayers whereas private firms obtain funds voluntarily from investors
willing to risk their own wealth. An intelligent investor will not lend money without
assurance that it will be recovered. Yet this is what the government does with taxpayers'
money whenever it funds another dubious government enterprise. Investors typically
calculate the returns of an investment relative to the investment's risk before investing.
Bearing risk is one of the beneficial functions that these individuals perform. Without
someone willing to accept these risks, society would have trouble advancing. Politicians
calculate returns to investment in terms of votes, indifferent to the effect on the
economy. Subsequent investment decisions of public-sector firms are made by political
officials playing with the taxpayers' resources. Entrepreneurs who are capable of
attracting financial capital know that they must return something of value to investors to
be successful. The return politicians primarily worry about is their return to power.
Needless to say, both groups have vastly different incentives. Subsidies, favourable tax
treatment, and regulations are often used to protect state-operated firms from private
competitors. If a government project fails to generate enough revenue to cover its costs,
there is no bankruptcy mechanism to bring it to a halt. Public-sector enterprise stifles
market forces by substituting politically pragmatic decisions for decisions based solely
upon the financial situation of a firm. Government bureaucrats seldom lose their jobs for
bad decisions whereas their private counterparts have levels of accountability unmatched
in the public sector. Similar perverse incentives exist when debt guarantees are issued by
the government. When protected by debt-guarantees, firms are able to engage in riskier or
less profitable projects--at someone else's expense--than they might otherwise have. This
creates distortion in the economy and results in a further erosion of decision-making
based on competitive forces. By issuing these guarantees, the government becomes an
influential partner in these firms.
To estimate the importance of government business
decision-making within a province, we measure the value of total liabilities and net worth
of government business enterprises and the value of government debt guarantees as a
percentage of provincial GDP. This illustrates the relative size of such enterprises
within provincial economies and allows for cross-provincial comparisons.
Data Source : Public Sector Assets
and Liabilities, Historical Overview, Financial Management System, Statistics Canada,
Catalogue No. 68-508. In the case of Quebec, the dollar value of the Quebec Pension Plan
has been deducted, because for the other provinces this service is provided federally.
Years 1993 and 1994 were obtained using the disk version of this dataset.
I(c). Price Controls
Price controls interfere with the freedom of buyers and
sellers to undertake exchanges even when both parties agree on the terms of trade. Price
controls are a forced transfer of property from a private owner to another individual. For
example, if price controls on rental housing cut the rate of return of a property in half,
half the property is seized from the owner since, presumably, landowners are in business
to earn a living and not to subsidize tenants in high-rent cities. Surprisingly, in many
cases this is a transfer from the poor to the middle class, as many rental operators are
less wealthy then their tenants (Lehrer 1991). Since price controls constrain exchange and
expropriate property from owners, they are inconsistent with economic freedom. The more
price controls are used to distort prices, the larger are the associated inefficiencies.
This component measures the extent of price controls
imposed by government on goods and services for each province.
Data Source : Research undertaken
by Faisal Arman from provincial government regulations.
I(d). Regulatory Effort
One of the most important though often overlooked
challenges to Canada's economic competitiveness has been the regulatory burdens imposed by
all levels of government on businesses, large or small (Mihlar 1996). The ability of
business to operate with increased efficiency and productivity (the essential requirement
of a higher standard of living) is restricted by the ever expanding regulatory burdens
imposed by well-meaning governments. Such burdens are costly and chaotic for business
because they are inherently unpredictable. Politicians themselves rarely know which
regulation or law will be in vogue in months to come. In the course of a year, the typical
parliament enacts all sorts of statutes covering all types of activities. Often these
deleterious activities receive little media coverage or public debate.
The number of regulations affecting people and businesses
in Canada has escalated in the last two decades, and there has been an accompanying
increase in the costs of compliance associated with such regulations. Regulatory burdens,
like high taxation, are an impediment to additional investment and new jobs. This index
measures the resources expended by provincial governments in implementing and maintaining
regulations on businesses as a percentage of business revenue.
Data Source : Business revenue
data was compiled from the Provincial Economic Accounts, Statistics Canada, Catalogue No.
13-213 (subtracting total government consumption from GDP). Government expenditure on
regulation data was prepared on a public-accounts basis by Dr. Paul Reed, Senior Social
Scientist, Statistics Canada, 1996.
II. Takings and Discriminatory Taxation
Modern governments are particularly likely to engage in
activities that confiscate from one group and give to another. This is true for both the
budgetary and regulatory policies of government. The justification often seems
incomprehensible as there are no logical reasons why the government should pick the
pockets of its citizens on behalf of farmers, fishers, or other receivers of subsidies.
When governments play favourites and take from one group to transfer to another, or impose
the costs of public services disproportionately on particular groups, they violate
economic freedom. Our research has identified four domains where discriminatory behaviour
in the political sphere is particularly important. These areas are (a) Transfers and
subsidies as a percentage of GDP; (b) Top marginal tax rate and the income threshold at
which it applies; (c) Direct corporate taxes as a percentage of corporate profits; and (d)
Provincial sales tax.
II(a). Transfers and Subsidies as a Percentage
of GDP
Transfers and subsidies violate the freedom of individuals
to keep the value of their labour or investments. When governments tax one person in order
to give money to another, they separate individuals from the fruits of their labour and
reduce the real returns of such activity, lowering the incentive to be productive. This is
true whether funds are transferred from the rich to the poor or, as is often the case,
from the poor to the rich, from one racial group to another, or from the politically
disorganized to the politically powerful. The taking of property, including labour
services, without fully compensating the rightful owner is an infringement of economic
freedom. The ratio of transfers and subsidies to GDP indicates the degree to which various
provinces use their budgets to engage in taking and transfer activities. Low ratings are
given to those provinces with the greatest portion of their GDP dedicated to transfers and
subsidies.
The 1996 measure of this component uses 1995 Provincial
Economic Accounts data. Data from 1996 was not available during the completion of the
index.
Data Source : System of National
Accounts, Provincial Economic Accounts, Annual Estimates disk version (1961-1996),
Statistics Canada, Catalogue No. 13-213.
II(b). Top Marginal Tax Rate and the Income Threshold
at Which It Applies
High marginal tax rates discriminate against productive
citizens and deny them the benefits of their efforts. In essence, such tax rates seize
wealth from certain taxpayers without providing them an equivalent increase in service.
Generally, high marginal tax rates are a very inefficient
form of raising government revenue, since people will often reduce their work effort and
make other adjustments when a large proportion of their marginal earnings are taxed
away--the existence of tax havens and other loopholes is well known. Also, when marginal
taxes reach a certain level, the returns for dishonesty become very high. Under certain
circumstances, a normally honest citizen will be induced to cheat by a revenue-hungry
government. Thus, high marginal tax rates impose an additional cost --and loss of
freedom--over and above the revenues transferred to the government. Taxes are, in effect,
a negative subsidy applied to productive activity.
This component is based on the ratings used in the Economic
Freedom of the World. It takes into account both the highest marginal tax rate as well as
the income threshold at which it applies.
Data Source: "Finances of the
Nation," Canadian Tax Foundation 1982, 1985, 1989, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997
(entitled "The National Finances" before 1995).
II(c). Direct Corporate Taxes as a Percentage
of Corporate Profits
Within an economy, technical progress drives growth and is
embodied in investment in new capital. High corporate taxes deter new investment while
simultaneously reducing future economic well-being and the associated benefits of a higher
standard of living. By forgoing the latest and most efficient technology, labour
productivity is constrained. Labour productivity is the key to a higher standard of living
since all production ultimately becomes consumption. The more efficient production is, the
more products that the consumer can afford as wages are representative of labour
productivity. The more a nation can produce, the more each citizen can receive. Weakening
production therefore reduces a society's standard of living. High corporate tax rates
impose costs over and above the revenues transferred to the government and result in lower
levels of investment, less employment, and a slower growth rate. Though some activists
claim that corporate taxes are simply paid by the rich, this is not the case. Taxes that
reduce efficiency and limit production hurt everyone, irrespective of income bracket.
This component was calculated using the direct taxes paid
by corporations as a percentage of corporate profits within each jurisdiction. Although,
due to differences in tax code, it would be preferable to have a marginal measure, there
is no accurate marginal measure for cross-provincial comparisons.
Data Source: "Provincial
Economic Accounts," 13-213. Statistics Canada.
II(d). Provincial Sales Tax
Sales taxes on goods and services limit individual
discretion in consumption choice as a result of the increased costs that they impose.
Sales taxes create a gap between the cost of the good or service and the price that one
must pay to obtain it. In a normal transaction, the person buying an item places more
value on the item than the seller (or he would have no reason to purchase this item).
Every transaction adds to the welfare of society by transferring this sliver of value (the
difference between the value to the consumer and the price he pays) to the consumer. Taxes
interrupt this beneficial exchange when the tax increases the cost of the item above the
value of the object to the consumer. For example, if a consumer values a certain brand of
molasses at three dollars a litre, and the sale price is two dollars, the consumer
receives a net benefit of one dollar for every litre he purchases. This gain comes at the
expense of no one and is a true gain for society. If taxes raise the price by 50 cents,
then 50 cents of the previous gain is transferred to the government. When taxes raise the
price of molasses past three dollars, the consumer will stop purchasing molasses (or rely
on the black market for molasses) as its price is greater than the value the he places on
it. Each purchase of a litre of molasses was a one dollar net benefit for society in the
first two examples. In the first instance, the benefit was captured entirely by the
consumer, and in the second, the government and the consumer split the benefit evenly.
When the consumer halts his purchase of molasses, this represents a loss to society that
is not captured by another part of society. Thus while sales taxes (or any other tax)
raise revenue, there is, in the words of economists, a deadweight loss to society above
the cost of the tax to the consumer. This loss is difficult to measure but there is no
doubt that this loss exists and that it grows as the level of provincial sales tax rises.
This component measures the level of sales tax within each
province. Values for 1994 were taken from the Manitoba Provincial Budget (1994). GST is
not included in these calculations as it is a federally levied tax.
Data Source: "Finances of the
Nation," Canadian Tax Foundation 1982, 1985, 1989, 1991, 1995, 1996, 1997 (entitled
"The National Finances" before 1995).
III. Interprovincial Trade
Economists of all persuasions have recognized the
efficiency gains made possible by free trade. If there were free trade among the Canadian
provinces, residents of different provinces would gain from interprovincial divisions of
labour, economies of scale, and specialization in areas where they have a comparative
advantage.
Trade allows trading partners to produce a larger joint
output than that which would have been produced separately. From this larger production
each partner can benefit. An easy way to see how trade is beneficial is to examine the
manufacture of automobiles. We can either purchase automobiles from domestic firms or we
can import them. Importing automobiles requires an outflow of Canadian dollars. Our dollar
has little intrinsic value embodied within it; it is not priceless art or precious metal.
Those who accept Canadian dollars wish to exchange these slips of paper for something they
want. If we imagine that the foreign exporters of automobiles desire Canadian wheat, then
the Canadian dollar becomes an intermediary in the trade of automobiles for wheat. If the
government imposes a tariff on the import of foreign automobiles, this drives up their
price and lowers demand. This, in turn, lowers demand for Canadian wheat. Barriers to
trade do not protect the Canadian economy from competitors; barriers only protect the
particular industry--in this case, domestic manufacturers of automobiles--at the expense
of another industry--in our example, farmers. This is equivalent to a transfer from
farmers to automobile manufacturers without compensation, and represents a violation of
economic freedom (Friedman 1996).
Freedom of exchange is central to economic freedom; hence
any circumstance that makes it difficult for buyers and sellers of goods, services,
capital, or labour to complete a mutually beneficial transaction can be defined as a
"barrier" to trade (Trebilcock and Schwanen 1995). The data in this area focus
on two types of restrictions: labour mobility and barriers to trade in food and
agricultural products. The components in this area do not by any means cover all the
barriers to trade that the provinces have erected but provide an illustrative sample of
factors that are quantifiable. As a proxy measure for a kind of barrier that is difficult
to evaluate, we believe that this component reflects the impediments to trade among the
provinces.
III(a). Occupational Licensing
Each province is empowered to regulate occupational
standards, licensing, certification, registration, and residency requirements. They are
not, of course, required to regulate, but this option is often overlooked. Since provinces
seldom work in tandem in this regard, these bureaucratic rules create barriers to mobility
of labour. Such measures prevent the free movement of labour in seeking opportunities in
other provinces freely and without hindrance. Subject to certain qualifications, any
worker qualified for an occupation in one jurisdiction in Canada should have access to
employment opportunities in any other jurisdiction. These restrictions were not created in
order to protect consumers in each province, as national standards could serve this
purpose if necessary, but instead to protect the interests of entrenched labour in their
respective provinces. The restriction of mobility of labour is clearly a violation of
individual economic freedom and one must ask if it is really necessary for provinces to
restrict the free movement of beekeepers or hairdressers. The extent to which labour
mobility is hampered in each province is reflected in the number of occupations that each
province regulates. The higher the number of regulated occupations, the more labour
mobility is restricted.
Data Source: R.G. Evans and W.T.
Stanbury, "Occupational Regulation in Canada," a background study prepared for
the Economic Council of Canada, Regulation Reference, 1980. Updated through to 1995/96 by
Faisal Arman using provincial statute records.
III(b). Marketing Boards (Agricultural)
Marketing boards represent a significant regulatory
instrument. The majority of new provincial marketing boards have been those with supply
management powers that enable them to control the supply of products by setting prices and
production quotas and by disposing of "surplus" output. Import controls are
becoming a standard appendage of supply management (Evans and Stanbury 1980). In essence,
marketing boards are cartels that regulate the supply, price, and flow of goods. This
component measures the share of farm receipts influenced by supply management boards by
province as a ratio of total farm receipts (Canadian Wheat Board payments are excluded
from total farm receipts where necessary). The greater the share of farm receipts
collected through supply management boards, the lower the score given in this component.
These policies encourage less efficient land use and extract money from consumers to be
passed to producers. Instead of sparking efficiency gains, our system of marketing boards
has allowed less efficient producers to exist. This wastes precious resources and has
undoubtedly lowered the standard of living of Canadians.
Data Source: Farm Cash Receipts
and Payments Summary Report, Agricultural Division, Statistics Canada 1981, 1985, 1989,
1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, Catalogue No. 21-603 UPE.
IV: Regulation of the Labour Market
IV(a). Minimum Wage Legislation
High minimum wages increase unemployment. Minimum-wage
legislation is often enacted in hopes of benefiting those with low incomes but, in fact,
it has the perverse result of reducing demand for low-skilled workers and boosting demand
for their more highly skilled counterparts. Thus, the costs of such policies are borne by
those whom they were enacted to help. Empirical evidence from both developed and
developing countries confirms the accuracy of these statements and serves as an important
reminder to jurisdictions seeking to influence the market through legislation (Robinson
1997). The Economist magazine, when discussing the proposed national minimum-wage policy
in Britain, said that the proposal "would fly in the face of economic logic" and
that "most low-paid workers are not, in fact, poverty-stricken, but rather
second-earners in middle-income households. Thus, the minimum wage is not a well-targeted
instrument for helping the poor." Minimum wages drive up the cost of doing business
which reduces jobs, hurting poor families further. The "reason why a minimum wage
would not help the poorest homes is that many of them have no one in work. Worse, a
minimum wage would destroy jobs--the more jobs the higher it is set--by stopping people
willing to work at low wages from doing so" (The Economist 1997: 54-55).
This component measures the annual income earned by working
at the minimum wage as a ratio of per-capita GDP. This is a measure of a province's
ability to bear a higher wage since per-capita GDP is representative of the average
productivity of the labour force. As the minimum wage grows to be a higher percentage of
provincial per-capita GDP, there are increasingly negative economic consequences.
Data Source: Human Resources
Development Canada, Statistics Canada and the Provincial Economic Accounts, Statistics
Canada, 1961-1996 (disk version), Catalogue No. 13-213.
Methodology
Estimates for 1998
The estimates for 1998 used in Provincial Economic Freedom
in Canada were based upon the 1996 data for each of the 11 components of the index. This
year was chosen because there were data available for this year for most of the 11
components. Updates will be made to the index when newer data becomes available.
Weighting the Components
Each component of the index developed for Provincial
Economic Freedom in Canada has a different influence on the economic freedom within a
province. Some restrictions are inherently more detrimental to economic freedom than
others. In light of this, a weighting scheme is needed to arrive at a final measure of
provincial economic freedom.
After the data for each of the components were assembled,
each province received a grade from zero through 10 for each component. Each component's
grade was then weighted based on a system derived from the system used in the first two
editions of Economic Freedom of the World (Gwartney, Lawson, and Block 1996; Gwartney and
Lawson 1997). The weights used in Economic Freedom of the World were
based on a survey of the participants in the
Fraser--Liberty Fund Symposia Series . . . We constructed a survey instrument which
described the 17 components in our index and asked the participants of these conferences
to provide us with their views concerning the weights that should be attached to each of
the components. Since all of these people attended at least one of the conferences, we
were reasonably sure of their familiarity with the concept of economic freedom and the
factors that influence it. The average weight suggested by the respondents was then used
to weight the components and derive the summary index for each of the years. (Gwartney and
Lawson 1997: 7)
The weights for components taken directly from the Economic
Freedom of the World were modified for use with the Canadian provinces, which are subject
to political and economic conditions different from those at work in international states.
Weights for components created specifically for Provincial Economic Freedom in Canada were
calculated based on their assumed contribution to provincial economic freedom as compared
to other items already included. These weights were then adjusted to total 100. (See
Exhibit 1).
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Tel: (604) 688-0221 Fax: (604) 688-8539 Book Orders: 1-800-665-3558
You can contact us at the above email address for any comments or
information requests. Please report any dead links or technical problems.
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