Business & Economics Economic History
Federalism and the Canadian Economic Union
- Publisher
- University of Toronto Press
- Initial publish date
- Apr 2019
- Category
- Economic History, Economic Conditions, Regional Planning
-
eBook
- ISBN
- 9781487572426
- Publish Date
- Apr 2019
- List Price
- $60.00
Add it to your shelf
Where to buy it
Description
This volume focuses on the issues involved in securing an internal common market within Canada.
The first part addresses some underlying analytical issues. Why do barriers exist? Are federations likely to be characterized by more internal barriers than are unitary states?
Part Two documents many of the impediments at both the provincial and federal level. An attempt is then made to quantify the costs of these impediments.
Part Three presents a comparison of various types of barriers across different federalisms (i.e., labour mobility, tax harmonization, regional development strategies).
The final part focuses on constitutional and other avenues that may be open to implement policies designed to increase harmonization of policies. The conclusion is devoted to establishing an agenda for future research.
The papers included here were originally presented at a conference sponsored jointly by the Ontario Economic Council and the Canada-U.S. Law Institute.
About the authors
Michael Trebilcock holds the Chair in Law and Economics in the Faculty of Law at the University of Toronto.
Michael J. Trebilcock's profile page
J. Robert S. Prichard is the President of the University of Toronto.
J. Robert S. Prichard's profile page
THOMAS J. COURCHENE is professor of economics at the University of Western Ontario and chairman of the Ontario Economic Council.
John Whalley is Professor of Economics at the University of Western Ontario, Research Associate at NBER, and Coordinator of the Global Economy Group at CESifo.
Other titles by
Reshaping the Mosaic
Canadian Immigration Policy in the Twenty-First Century
Public Inquiries
A Scholar's Engagements with the Policy-Making Process
Paradoxes of Professional Regulation
In Search of Regulatory Principles
Dealing with Losers
The Political Economy of Policy Transitions
The Design of Competition Law Institutions
Global Norms, Local Choices
Debtor and Creditor
Cases, Notes, and Materials