Municipal Spending in Ontario: A Long-Term Overview
NORTHERN ECONOMIST 2.0
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5d ago
 This originally appeared on the Fraser Institute Blog.  Municipal dollars in Ontario—where did the money go? — April 24, 2024     Municipal budget season in Ontario recently ended and the evidence reveals some fairly substantial tax increases around the province. For example, Waterloo Region approved a property tax increase of 6.9 per cent while Toronto passed an increase of 9.5 per cent. Hamilton ultimately saw an increase of 5.8 per cent after fears of a double-digit tax increase were unveiled in the fall while Kingston saw one of the lo ..read more
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What New “Affordable” Housing Looks Like in Thunder Bay
NORTHERN ECONOMIST 2.0
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2w ago
 As the federal government ramps up the billions to address the housing crisis in Canada including $6 billion to construct housing infrastructure. $1.5 billion to protect existing apartment buildings and a $15 billion apartment loan program, one would expect to see progress on the affordable housing front.  In the end, the issue is not really a shortage of housing to either buy or rent but affordable housing.  A glance at assorted real estate site in any city shows a large number of listings either for sale or for rent.  However, when one looks at the price, it is the cost ..read more
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Ontario’s Evolving Salary Disclosure List
NORTHERN ECONOMIST 2.0
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1M ago
  Just before the arrival of the Easter weekend, Ontario released its annual public sector salary disclosure list.  The 2023 edition of the list saw a total of just over 300,000 individuals on the list earning a total salary amount of $38.2 billion for an average salary of $126,941.  What is interesting is looking at the long-term evolution of the list from its debut under the Harris government in 1996 to the present.  The list was instituted during Premier Harris’s Common-Sense revolution as a mechanism to essentially provide accountability for public sector salaries and s ..read more
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Ontario government’s fiscal history drenched in red ink
NORTHERN ECONOMIST 2.0
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1M ago
 This post originally appeared on the Fraser Institute Blog, March 25th, 2024. Ontario government’s fiscal history drenched in red ink — March 25, 2024 The Ford government will table its next budget on Tuesday. But a longer-term perspective on the evolution of Ontario’s government finances provides some important context for today. Since Confederation, Ontario has seen a massive expansion of its revenues, expenditures and debt. And its fiscal performance in terms of balancing its finances has oscillated over the years. Using data from the Finances of the Nation database, assorted Ontar ..read more
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What is a Provincial Government to Do?
NORTHERN ECONOMIST 2.0
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1M ago
  Ontario is coming up to Budget Day next week on March 26th and it will be interesting to see what the provincial government does on a number of issues because quite frankly the provincial government is in a bit of a pickle when it comes to economic and fiscal policy.  Over the last decade, Ontario has been hit by a productivity decline that has translated into slower economic growth.  Since the pandemic, this has been combined with a bout of inflation and a surge in population growth.  When you start looking at Ontario fiscal and economic indicators in real per capita ter ..read more
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Will Thunder Bay Meet Its Housing Targets?
NORTHERN ECONOMIST 2.0
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1M ago
  The Mayor’s State of the City Address last evening highlighted  housing construction in Thunder Bay particularly touting that Thunder Bay within Ontario had met its target so far and ranking tenth amongst Ontario centers (See here for a ranking).  The Mayor reiterated once again that in response to coming economic development and demand, Thunder Bay needed more housing and has a target of 1,691 new homes over three years.  Naturally, the question that arises is whether or not Thunder Bay can indeed meet this target. Much depends on the ability of the local construction se ..read more
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Ontario's Housing Woes-a supply side problem
NORTHERN ECONOMIST 2.0
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2M ago
 This post originally appeared on the Fraser Institute Blog, February 24th, 2024. Ontario’s housing woes—a supply-side problem Housing prices in Ontario, like in much of the rest of Canada, have soared because of several factors including supply constraints combined with rising demand fuelled by robust population growth. The most recent installment in this ongoing saga is the federal government’s move to cap international student visas to which Ontario has announced measures requiring universities and colleges to guarantee student housing—though how this is to be done is a good question ..read more
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Municipal Spending Evolution in Thunder Bay
NORTHERN ECONOMIST 2.0
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2M ago
  As the 2024 municipal budget season wraps up, it is worth looking at where Thunder Bay has been going over the last decade in terms of the composition of its total municipal expenditures (all spending, tax and grant supported, capital and operating).  Using multi-year financial data (2002 to 2022) from the Ontario Ministry of Municipal Affairs Financial Information Review, one can obtain an overview of the trends.  In 2012, total municipal expenditures in Thunder Bay were 505.4 million dollars and in 2022 they were 599.8 million making for an increase of 19 percent.  Comp ..read more
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Measuring Municipal Public Sector Size
NORTHERN ECONOMIST 2.0
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3M ago
  Public sector size and its impact on the economy is a long-standing research question in public finance.  In the case of Canada with its federal system of government, measures of public sector size often focus on either total public sector size or break it down into measures of federal and/or provincial public sector size.  These measures commonly take government spending or government revenues as a share of GDP to estimate the size of the public sector footprint.  Less common are attempts to related municipal public sector size to the size of their local economies.   ..read more
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Ontario Economic Decline is Real and Substantial
NORTHERN ECONOMIST 2.0
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3M ago
 This post originally appeared in the Fraser Institute Blog. A spectre is stalking Ontario, and it’s the spectre of decline. For most of post-war Canadian economic history, Ontario has had a per-capita real GDP substantially above the Canadian average. At the same time, Ontario has had real per-capita GDP growth relatively close to the Canadian average. This dominance was rooted in Ontario’s role as Canada’s industrial heartland that developed in the wake of Confederation. Ontario was indeed a beneficiary of Canada’s national economic development policies based on development of the Canad ..read more
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