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Political Science Economic Policy

Unequal Beginnings

Agriculture and Economic Development in Quebec and Ontario until 1870

by (author) John McCallum

Publisher
University of Toronto Press
Initial publish date
Apr 1980
Category
Economic Policy, General
  • Paperback / softback

    ISBN
    9780802063625
    Publish Date
    Apr 1980
    List Price
    $41.95
  • eBook

    ISBN
    9781442682894
    Publish Date
    Feb 1987
    List Price
    $51.00

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Description

By the time of Confederation Ontario’s economic lead over Quebec had been well established. John McCallum shows that the origins of this lead had little to do with the conservatism of the habitants and the church in Quebec, little to do with any anti-industrial bias of the Montreal merchants, and nothing to do with Confederation. Rather the origins lay in the wealth provided by Ontario’s superior agricultural land.

During much of the first part of the nineteenth century Ontario farmers were more specialized in wheat-growing than the twentieth-century farmers of Saskatchewan, and when the market conditions changed in the 1860s the province was able to use the capital derived from wheat to shift to other lines of production. The Quebec farmers, lacking both the virgin land of Ontario and the growing markets of the northeastern United States, were unable to find profitable substitutes for wheat. As a result, the cash income of the average Ontario farmer was at least triple that of his Quebec counterparts in the years before Confederation, and this enormous difference had profound effects on economic development in other sectors of the economy.

In Ontario the growth of towns, transportation facilities, and industry was inextricably linked to the province’s strong agricultural base. In Quebec little development occurred outside Montreal and Quebec City. Montreal industrialists did have several advantages; yet Quebec industry could not possibly absorb the province’s surplus farm population. Ontario’s wheat boom provided the capital which permitted Ontario industry to evolve in the classic fashion; indeed, Ontario wheat may be a rare instance of a staple whose surplus was retained in the producing area.

John McCallum’s analytical and historical account of economic patterns that persist today makes a solid and original contribution to Canadian economic history.

About the author

JOHN McCALLUM has taught economics the University of Manitoba, Simon Fraser University, the University of Qu�bec at Montr�al and McGill University. He was elected as a Member of Provincial Parliament for Markham, Ontario.

John McCallum's profile page

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