Eugene Lang: A military miracle
July 21, 2010 by admin
Filed under Of interest
Canada 2020′s Eugene Lang has an op-ed in today’s Ottawa Citizen on the budget math behind the recent announcement to purchase 65 F-35 Joint Strike Fighters (JSF).
Debating in the Dark Ages
July 16, 2010 by admin
Filed under Blog, Of interest
by Phil DeMont
Public policy thrives upon pointed discussion and different opinions.
However, every once in a while comes a viewpoint that is so jaw-droppingly stupid that its existence severely damages one’s belief in the value of open debate.
Such is the case of Ottawa’s decision to allow people to voluntarily answer their census questionnaires.
The federal government used to require residents to answer the entire set of Statistics Canada question under threat of fine. The purpose was to obtain fulsome, unbiased data regarding Canadian life.
But, Industry Minister Tony Clement decided that the gripes of a handful of citizens who objected to the intrusive nature of these inquiries outweighed the importance of collecting good numbers.
And, in a nod to the ‘trial-by-ordeal’ crowd of the medieval Europe, Clement’s supporters even questioned the value of accumulating information at all.
“Bureaucrats and busybody meddling do-gooders need information that is outside of their personal experience, so they need statistical information(…)The only way they can find out who ‘needs’ other peoples’ money is through statistics,” says Maureen Bader, a spokesperson for the Canadian Taxpayers’ Federation on that group’s blog.
One can almost see these people tossing a witch – or maybe just a woman wearing pants – into the ocean on the dubious theory that, if she floated, she was guilty.
The Canadian Taxpayers’ Bader says she does not need statistics to figure policy positions out; she talks to her neighbours.
Well, living next door to me in Toronto is an art history professor on one side and a New Zealand IT consultant, on the other.
They are lovely people. But, I am not sure they would know anything about child poverty or whether the housing on native reservations is adequate.
No one likes to fill out the Statistics Canada census. But, most Canadians understand that without some sort of evidential basis, government policy becomes what a couple of politicians in a backroom think.
Questions lead to answers
And most questions the government asks has a direct link to whether or not Ottawa should spend or tax.
Asking people how much in property taxes they pay might give a hint as to who is overtaxed relative to their neighbours.
Or asking people whether they are Eskimos could indicate that Ottawa’s aboriginal policies should be directed more towards southern cities rather than the rural north.
It is not about finding new places to spend more. That is a political decision.
More likely, the data will show whether that spending is being done efficiently.
Data as an advantage
For many years, the Economist magazine picked Canada as having the best statistical collection agency on the planet. And you can draw a link between the country’s economic stewardship during the 2009 recession and the quality of the information going into those decisions.
The United States, for instance, publishes an advance snapshot of its gross domestic product growth figures using early trade figures. Often, however, the U.S. GDP estimates turn out to be wrong by a wide margin and might even change from positive to negative when better data is incorporated into the calculations.
Canada does not have such problems; what Ottawa publishes as its GDP generally does not change with the introduction of more data.
Bad public policy
But, in one swoop, Clement has thrown away the country’s advantage.
Worse still, Ottawa has lost a powerful weapon in the fight against whiny interest groups who use their own numbers as a way to justify more government spending.
Previously, Ottawa could marshal statistical evidence to argue against groups seeking more public cash.
Now they cannot; instead, the political question – are you for us or against us – will decide this issue.
And that is not good public policy by anyone’s standards.
Lang: Why Canada shouldn’t strut on the global stage
July 7, 2010 by admin
Filed under Of interest
Canada 2020′s Eugene Lang has an article in today’s Globe and Mail on “why Canada shouldn’t strut on the global stage.”
Hirsch: Quest for truth in the oil sands
July 5, 2010 by admin
Filed under Of interest, Oil Sands
Great article by Todd Hirsch in today’s Globe, in search for “truth in the oil sands.”
Canada 2020 Luncheon with Prof. Ken Rogoff
July 5, 2010 by admin
Filed under CanadaCast, Feature
Canada 2020 and CACC Luncheon with Australian Deputy Prime Minister Wayne Swan
June 28, 2010 by admin
Filed under CanadaCast, Feature
Canada 2020 and the CACC were pleased to welcome Australian Deputy Prime Minister Wayne Swan for a luncheon address on June 26th.
The Honourable Wayne Swan has been Treasurer since December 2007, and was appointed Deputy Prime Minister on June 24, 2010 by the new Prime Minister Julia Gillard. Deputy Prime Minister Wayne Swan has been a key player on all of the main economic issues of the past two years, including bringing down two economic stimulus packages. He has also been at the centre of debate in Australia on the two main economic issues of the day:
- The proposed emissions trading regime, which has been rejected in the Senate. Prime Minister Gillard has re-committed her government to pushing ahead with action to address climate change including putting a price on carbon.
- The proposed resources rent tax. Prime Minister Gillard said that she wants to enter into a dialogue with the mining industry to find a way forward.
Prime Minister Gillard indicated that she plans to call a general election between now and the end of the year.
Greening the Oil Sands, Washington DC
June 28, 2010 by admin
Filed under CanadaCast, Feature, Oil Sands
June 22, 2010, Washington, DC – You might have seen the coverage in the Guardian on our event. Read John Podesta’s keynote speech. Now see the photos.
The Canada 2020 Washington, DC Oil Sands Symposium’s final report is now available.
Lang’s reality check on UK star chambers and fiscal deficits
June 10, 2010 by admin
Filed under Of interest
Canada 2020′s Eugene Lang is printed in the UK’s Left Foot Forward with a reality check on star chambers and fiscal deficits: A view from Canada. Read it here.
David Cameron and the end of ideology
June 1, 2010 by admin
Filed under Blog, Of interest
by Phil DeMont
As David Cameron settles in as the United Kingdom’s new Prime Minster, he heads up a British parliament in which no single party has a majority of seats and the administration stays in office basically at the behest of the opposition.
Such tenuous governorship is non-existent in a republic and reasonably rare under the parliamentary form of government. But, there is a decided division among voters as to whether forcing an administration to listen somewhat to opposition politicians is a good or bad turn of events.
Supporters argue democratic dictatorships are stymied by forced appeals to other parties while opponents say such consultations doom decisive policymaking.
Canada has endured minority parliaments since 2004 and has groups arguing both sides of the minority coin.
And, now, commentators wonder whether Britain has caught Canada’s disease and is sliding into a prolonged period in which a majority will become an endangered species.
The immediate reason for the U. K.’s electoral indecision is simple enough – a government of which many people had grown weary, a main opposition which offers some attractive assets and a third party which has gained enough attention to draw off dissent voters.
In England, the reappearance of the Liberal Democratic Party has siphoned off sufficient support from the Conservatives to keep the Tories from forming a majority and from Labour to prevent that party from saying in power.
But commentators are wary of a British political ship unable to steer a straight policy course.
The way out of the stalemate, analysts opine, is for one of the three leaders – Cameron, a new Labour leader or the LP’s Nick Clegg – to develop enough charisma to win over fickle voters and gain a majority.
That puts the current dilemma of the United Kingdom – and by implication Canada – on the level of a returning guest on ‘American Idol’.
Essentially, if the politician can smile nicely in the next round, he will get the votes of Simon and the other judges and win the competition.
Now, the charisma argument of minority politics might be satisfying to people who ascribe voting troubles to incompetent politicians who cannot figure out proper policies and cannot communicate their ideas in an engaging fashion.
While possibly true, the argument is too superficial to explain the current parliamentary impasse.
In past decades majority governments were often the result of a political system in which parties had obvious and important differences.
In 1983, for example, Labour’s Michael Foote, with his party’s new socialist manifesto, offered a stark alternative to Margaret Thatcher’s tax cuts and assertive foreign policy. The result was an overwhelming victory for the ‘Iron Lady’.
In 1988, Canadian Conservative Brian Mulroney presented voters with a pro-free trade, U.S.-friendly platform by contrast to Liberal John Turner, with his border-erasing campaign ads in opposition to a trade agreement with the United States.
In that vote, Mulroney won the last majority for the Progressive Conservative Party in its history.
In effect, past decades saw political parties staking out different ends of the ideological spectrum, whether in levels of opposition to the Soviet Union or interest in cutting taxes.
Indeed, the middle-to-later part of the 20th Century was an era in which voters could assess alternatives because parties held varied positions on key issues.
Since that time, however, the Berlin Wall signalled the end to the communist bloc and the appearance of Democrats in the United States and Liberals in Canada willing to cut spending to balance budgets meant that left and right parties now were crowding into the centre of the political spectrum.
Even with 2008-09 recession, governments that once prided themselves on their fiscal rectitude ran record deficits in a bid to re-float sagging economies.
And, in the realm of foreign policy, many governments railed against state-sponsored terrorism and few administrations were interested in using other governments as regional proxies for Great Power struggles as was the case during the Cold War.
In the end, that pushing into the middle was the reason for the appearance of minority governments in some parliamentary democracies.
Parties cannot really present stark differences to each other because those differentiating points do not exist.
On the national finances, how to run the health care system and how to run foreign policy, many parties in many countries operate from a general consensus with radical alternatives receiving little credibility among voters.
Thus, politicians battle each other over small policy differences, usually insufficient to shake voters loose from other party, or how well they can communicate their brand of the same policy.
As a result, political campaigns do, in fact, come down to whether one leader’s smile can convince a voter that the person is trust-worthy or believable.
That means, until a politician emerges as a better storyteller than his brethren or a party finds a different – but credible – policy answer to the day’s burning questions, minority governments will remain a fixture in the landscape of parliamentary democracies for years to come.
Telecom in Canada: A New Owner’s Manual
May 7, 2010 by admin
Filed under CanadaCast, Feature, Uncategorized
On May 6th Canada 2020 hosted a panel discussion titled “Telecom in Canada: A New Owner’s Manual — Making Sense of the Policy and Politics.” This panel examined what foreign ownership will mean for the telecoms industry, consumers, and businesses.
You can read Lawson Hunter’s discussion paper, Scrambled Signals: Canadian Content Policies in a World of Technological Abundance.
Panelists:
- Konrad von Finckenstein, Chairman of the CRTC
- Robert Rabinovitch, former president, Canadian Broadcast Corporation
- Lawson Hunter, Stikeman Elliot, former senior executive at BCE and fomer federal head of competition policy and enforcement.
Moderator:
- Don Newman, CBC broadcaster, political commentator and Canada 2020 Advisory Board Member
Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.
See the media coverage (sub req.).
This free event was made possible thanks to the kind support of Amgen Canada, AstraZeneca, Bluesky Strategy Group, Inc., CIBC, Nexen, Pickworth Investments LP, Plutonic Power Corporation, Scotiabank, Suncor, TELUS, and individual members of the Canada 2020 Founders’ Circle.


