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Articles by Jim Stanford

New U.K. Government Signals Ambition on Labour Reforms

July 17, 2024

The new UK government is signaling some reasonably ambitious reforms on the labour policy front (certainly more ambitious than most were expecting, given the Labour Party’s austere pre-election rhetoric and platform).

They call the vision a New Deal for Working People . The policy framework is called A Plan to Make Work Pay. Broad features of the plan were mapped out in the King’s Speech (akin to our Speech from the Throne in Canada) delivered yesterday, and include:

Strengthening the UK minimum wage policy to make it a stronger living wage. (Their minimum wage, introduced by Tony Blair in 1998, is already pretty good by international standards: it is equivalent to 57% of median wages, vs. 50% in Canada, and it’s kept up with inflation since 2019.)

Banning zero hours

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Banning Replacement Workers

July 6, 2024

After decades of lobbying and advocacy by Canadian trade unions, the federal Parliament unanimously passed legislation to ban the use of replacement workers (or ‘scabs’) during strikes and lockouts in federally regulated industries (covering about 1 million workers in industries like including finance, interprovincial transportation, and telecommunications).

The legislation will take effect in June, 2025. It was supported by all parties in the House of Commons: Liberals, NDP, Greens, Bloc Québecois, and — surprisingly — Conservatives. The NDP negotiated support for this bill from the governing Liberals as part of their supply-and-confidence arrangement (which has kept the minority Liberals in power since the last election in 2012). While the Conservative party (like the Liberals)

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Is the Economy “Running Hot”? Or Cold, and Getting Colder?

January 23, 2023

The Bank of Canada is widely expected to increase its policy interest rate again this week, for the eighth time in the last 10 months. Media and financial market commentary on its decision has made numerous throwaway references to how Canada’s economy is still “running hot,” and that i why a rate hike is needed.

This common claim is surprising, and not consistent with economic evidence. Canada’s economy is not “running hot” by any concrete measure. Here are six:

1. Final domestic demand in Canada has been weakening for over a year, and was shrinking in the third quarter of 2022 (latest data). Were it not for the export sector (with the trade balance lifted by both growing exports and falling imports – the latter itself a sign of weakness not strength), GDP growth would have been

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Yes, Virginia, Supermarket Profits HAVE Expanded

December 8, 2022

Supermarket executives were up on Parliament Hill this week, appearing before the Standing Committee on Agriculture and Agri-Food’s inquiry into food inflation grocery chain profits. They repeated the now-familiar argument that supermarkets have not caused food inflation, they have merely passed along higher input costs to their customers; their profit margins have been stable, it is claimed.

Don’t believe them. Here are a few data points on the argument that the chains haven’t actually profited from inflation, since their profit margin has (supposedly) stayed the same. Here’s why I think that argument is not convincing:

1. Grocery store margins HAVE increased notably since the pandemic. The arguments we’ve heard this week are usually based on year-over-year changes in margins,

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Canada’s Secret Weapon in Fighting Climate Change: Great Trade Unions

May 3, 2021

U.S. President Joe Biden has been pushing the envelope in bringing America back into the Paris Accord process, setting more ambitious targets for reducing U.S. emissions, and committing to very big investments in renewable energy infrastructure and other climate-friendly measures. This is very encouraging, and will reinforce (and up the ante) for Canada to do better.

One news story about the Biden program, however, got me thinking about Canada’s climate debates. The story cited a statement of public support for Biden’s plan from the United Mine Workers of America – the largest union in the U.S. coal sector. The UMWA endorsed Biden’s proposal to accelerate the phase-out of coal use, so long as strong guarantees were provided for new job opportunities in renewable energy and

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Cutting Taxes in a Depression is Like Pushing on a String

September 28, 2020

BC Liberal leader Andrew Wilkinson today announced a plan to completely eliminate the provincial sales tax (currently 7%) for 1 year, and then cut it by 4 points (or 57%) after that. Conservatives are prone to make expensive tax cut promises during elections, a tendency which contradicts their other touch-stone of perpetually promising to get tough on deficits and debt. Like other governments, BC is already facing enormous deficits for years to come as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic and associated recession. While it might be hypocritical for deficit-phobic conservatives to argue for tax cuts even in the face of deficits, it has never stopped them before. So Wilkinson’s gambit should not be surprising. But by pledging to completely eliminate the province’s 2nd largest source of tax

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Cutting Taxes in a Depression is Like Pushing on a String

September 28, 2020

BC Liberal leader Andrew Wilkinson today announced a plan to completely eliminate the provincial sales tax (currently 7%) for 1 year, and then cut it by 4 points (or 57%) after that. Conservatives are prone to make expensive tax cut promises during elections, a tendency which contradicts their other touch-stone of perpetually promising to get tough on deficits and debt. Like other governments, BC is already facing enormous deficits for years to come as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic and associated recession. While it might be hypocritical for deficit-phobic conservatives to argue for tax cuts even in the face of deficits, it has never stopped them before. So Wilkinson’s gambit should not be surprising. But by pledging to completely eliminate the province’s 2nd largest source of tax

Read More »

Remembering John Loxley

August 6, 2020

The progressive economics community, in Canada and around the world, lost a wonderful colleague, comrade and friend with the passing of John Loxley on July 28, 2020. Here I would like to share some personal reflections on John’s impact on my life as a progressive economist, and the very rich legacy he has left our shared community. (I also commend the many other tributes that have been posted, including here here here here here and here.)

John embodied a combination of innovative, world-class economic analysis with a deep commitment to community organizing and political change – from the local to the global. He was among the most inspiring, collegial, and activist progressive economists I have ever had the privilege to work with.

I personally got to know John through his leading

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Remembering John Loxley

August 6, 2020

The progressive economics community, in Canada and around the world, lost a wonderful colleague, comrade and friend with the passing of John Loxley on July 28, 2020. Here I would like to share some personal reflections on John’s impact on my life as a progressive economist, and the very rich legacy he has left our shared community. (I also commend the many other tributes that have been posted, including here here here here here and here.)

John embodied a combination of innovative, world-class economic analysis with a deep commitment to community organizing and political change – from the local to the global. He was among the most inspiring, collegial, and activist progressive economists I have ever had the privilege to work with.

I personally got to know John through his leading

Read More »

Guest Blog: Prof. Harry Glasbeek on Coronavirus and capitalism

April 1, 2020

The legendary Prof. Harry Glasbeek of Osgoode Hall Law School at York University has penned the following commentary on how the COVID-19 pandemic is revealing and reinforcing the deep flaws in our economic and social order. It ends on a hopeful note: the people will demand better, when the immediate health crisis has passed. Prof. Glasbeek is the author of Capitalism: A Crime Story.

An edited version of this commentary was originally published by Canadian Dimension.

Statements of the Obvious as Fuel for Anti-Capitalist Fire

We know that we have a pandemic. Times are grim.

Given the rapacious nature of capitalism, a rapaciousness never discouraged by our political leaders and opinion moulders, there were always going to be capitalists who would try to profit from the health

Read More »

Guest Blog: Prof. Harry Glasbeek on Coronavirus and capitalism

April 1, 2020

The legendary Prof. Harry Glasbeek of Osgoode Hall Law School at York University has penned the following commentary on how the COVID-19 pandemic is revealing and reinforcing the deep flaws in our economic and social order. It ends on a hopeful note: the people will demand better, when the immediate health crisis has passed. Prof. Glasbeek is the author of Capitalism: A Crime Story.

An edited version of this commentary was originally published by Canadian Dimension.

Statements of the Obvious as Fuel for Anti-Capitalist Fire

We know that we have a pandemic. Times are grim.

Given the rapacious nature of capitalism, a rapaciousness never discouraged by our political leaders and opinion moulders, there were always going to be capitalists who would try to profit from the health

Read More »

Federal Support Package: The Pros, the Cons, and the Next Shoe to Drop

March 18, 2020

Here are some quick thoughts on the extensive package of
emergency measures announced today by Prime Minister Trudeau, Finance Minister
Morneau, and Bank of Canada Governor Poloz:

The Pros:

The government has worked quickly and creatively to find ways
to deliver support to Canadians, and fast – using the infrastructure of
existing benefits, and developing new channels where needed.

The government has recognized the gaping holes in the
existing social safety net: in particular, the fact that so many workers
(part-time, seasonal, self-employed, and gig) don’t qualify for normal EI
benefits. So their two new income supports (the Emergency Care Benefit and the
Emergency Support Benefit) will cover all categories of affected workers. That’s
an important change, and should be

Read More »

Federal Support Package: The Pros, the Cons, and the Next Shoe to Drop

March 18, 2020

Here are some quick thoughts on the extensive package of
emergency measures announced today by Prime Minister Trudeau, Finance Minister
Morneau, and Bank of Canada Governor Poloz:

The Pros:

The government has worked quickly and creatively to find ways
to deliver support to Canadians, and fast – using the infrastructure of
existing benefits, and developing new channels where needed.

The government has recognized the gaping holes in the
existing social safety net: in particular, the fact that so many workers
(part-time, seasonal, self-employed, and gig) don’t qualify for normal EI
benefits. So their two new income supports (the Emergency Care Benefit and the
Emergency Support Benefit) will cover all categories of affected workers. That’s
an important change, and should be

Read More »

Economic Response to Pandemic: Go Big, Go Fast

March 13, 2020

The health emergency created by the COVID-19 pandemic is of
course the primary concern of Canadians, and the first priority for government
to address. But it is increasingly clear that the economic fallout from the
pandemic is also going to constitute an emergency. And it requires government
to respond as urgently and powerfully in the economic sphere, as they are attempting
for public health.

I was invited onto CBC Radio’s special broadcast today to
discuss the economic consequences of the pandemic, and needed policy responses –
and also to comment on the policy announcements made by Finance Minister
Morneau, Bank of Canada Governor Poloz, and Superintendent of Financial
Institutions Rudin at a special joint news conference.

Here are some quick thoughts on what we can expect in

Read More »

Economic Response to Pandemic: Go Big, Go Fast

March 13, 2020

The health emergency created by the COVID-19 pandemic is of
course the primary concern of Canadians, and the first priority for government
to address. But it is increasingly clear that the economic fallout from the
pandemic is also going to constitute an emergency. And it requires government
to respond as urgently and powerfully in the economic sphere, as they are attempting
for public health.

I was invited onto CBC Radio’s special broadcast today to
discuss the economic consequences of the pandemic, and needed policy responses –
and also to comment on the policy announcements made by Finance Minister
Morneau, Bank of Canada Governor Poloz, and Superintendent of Financial
Institutions Rudin at a special joint news conference.

Here are some quick thoughts on what we can expect in

Read More »

A Warning from Australia on Scheer’s Climate Non-Plan

September 30, 2019

Andrew Scheer argues carbon pricing is the wrong way to limit GHG emissions. He has pledged to eliminate the federal carbon pricing system, promising that scrapping it will bring down the cost of living and unleash more business investment.

Most economists disagree. And all of the other major parties
include carbon pricing of some form in their respective plans to meet Canada’s
Paris commitments. So Scheer’s approach is a clear outlier, both intellectually
and politically.

Scheer claims his plan to eliminate carbon pricing, eliminate energy efficiency standards, and provide subsidies to “green” corporate investments would still allow Canada to meet its Paris targets. Most climate policy experts scoff at this claim. On Friday September 27 – the same day almost a million

Read More »

A Warning from Australia on Scheer’s Climate Non-Plan

September 30, 2019

Andrew Scheer argues carbon pricing is the wrong way to limit GHG emissions. He has pledged to eliminate the federal carbon pricing system, promising that scrapping it will bring down the cost of living and unleash more business investment.

Most economists disagree. And all of the other major parties
include carbon pricing of some form in their respective plans to meet Canada’s
Paris commitments. So Scheer’s approach is a clear outlier, both intellectually
and politically.

Scheer claims his plan to eliminate carbon pricing, eliminate energy efficiency standards, and provide subsidies to “green” corporate investments would still allow Canada to meet its Paris targets. Most climate policy experts scoff at this claim. On Friday September 27 – the same day almost a million

Read More »

The Economic Pay-Off from Public Education

June 19, 2019

On a trip back to Toronto this week I attended the launch of a new report commissioned by the Ontario Secondary School Teachers’ Federation, and written by Aimee McArthur-Gupta from the Conference Board of Canada. The report presents some estimates of the economic, fiscal and social benefits of public education programs.

The full report is here. It is a useful resource for all those campaigning against conservative cutbacks to school budgets (such as those in Ontario, Alberta, and Saskatchewan). It’s also an interesting example of economists attempting to put “numbers” on channels of causation which we all knew were important, but which are hard to measure.

The report has two major analytical sections. The first uses the Conference Board’s input-output model to simulate the

Read More »

The Economic Pay-Off from Public Education

June 19, 2019

On a trip back to Toronto this week I attended the launch of a new report commissioned by the Ontario Secondary School Teachers’ Federation, and written by Aimee McArthur-Gupta from the Conference Board of Canada. The report presents some estimates of the economic, fiscal and social benefits of public education programs.

The full report is here. It is a useful resource for all those campaigning against conservative cutbacks to school budgets (such as those in Ontario, Alberta, and Saskatchewan). It’s also an interesting example of economists attempting to put “numbers” on channels of causation which we all knew were important, but which are hard to measure.

The report has two major analytical sections. The first uses the Conference Board’s input-output model to simulate the

Read More »

NDP Math Error will Help the Party, Not Hurt It

May 23, 2018

The number-cruncher in me cringed in sympathy for the anonymous research nerds who made the now-famous math error in the Ontario NDP’s fiscal platform. They wrongly added a $700 million contingency reserve to net revenue, instead of to expenses.  The result is an underestimation of the planned deficit (if we include that reserve – more on that below) by $1.4 billion in each year.
Pompous voices predictably crowed that this error confirms the NDP’s supposed lack of fiscal credibility. In practice, though, this accounting tempest will turn out to be a non-event in this dramatic election campaign – and in fact, it may counterintuitively help the party’s surging campaign, rather than hurting it.First off, the budgeting error is clearly insignificant in the overall fiscal picture, no matter

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Update on Jimbo’s Minimum Wage Wager

October 14, 2017

It’s been over a week now since I challenged the authors of 5 business-friendly economic reports to a friendly wager over the future trajectory of employment in provinces that are raising their minimum wage to $15 per hour.  The challenge was issued in my Globe and Mail column of October 3.
I was responding to the several business groups and business-funded think tanks that had issued several reports predicting job losses from the higher minimum wage, in the run-up to the coming vote in the Ontario legislature on the policy.  I summarized some of the major flaws of the various studies: including their misreading and misapplication of recent economic research on the employment effects of minimum wages (which typically find very small, or even slightly positive, effects); their misleading

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The Laws of Free Trade are not Immutable After All

January 9, 2017

For years, we’ve been told the dictates of globalization, and the intrusive and prescriptive terms of free trade agreements in particular, are immutable, natural, and unquestionable.  When workers were displaced by the migration of multinational capital toward more profitable jurisdictions, we were told there’s nothing we can do about it except join the race to the bottom in a desperate attempt to hang onto our jobs.  When investment and employment were undermined by lopsided trade and capital flows, and employers and financiers utilized the leverage afforded them by unrestrained international mobility to ratchet the distributional structure of the economy ever-more-blatantly in their own favour, we were informed this was just the logic of markets.  And anyone who questioned that logic, or pointed out that it didn’t work in the real world like it is described in the economic textbooks, was labelled either economically illiterate or protectors of vested interests.
Now, suddenly, on the strength of a few tweets from a President who hasn’t even taken office yet, it seems that those rules are not so immutable, permanent, or natural after all.  Now, global corporations will move billions of dollars of investment, and thousands of good jobs, just because a President-elect wants them to.

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NAFTA: Suddenly, Everything’s on the Table

January 9, 2017

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Denying globalization’s downside won’t stop right-wing populism

October 20, 2016

From Jim Stanford
I was somewhat surprised to see Stephen Poloz recently urging economists to do more work identifying and disseminating research on the supposed benefits of free trade.  That’s slightly beyond his job description (perhaps more fitting with his last position as head of Export Development Canada).  But like economic leaders elsewhere in the world, Mr. Poloz is obviously concerned with the disintegration of popular support for neoliberal free trade deals.  That disintegration will have tectonic economic and political consequences.
True believers may think that merely educating citizens about how trade deals reallyare good for everyone (á la David Ricardo’s textiles and port parable) will save the day for globalization.  But I think there’s a much deeper problem.  The reality is that trade liberalization, as currently practiced (with an emphasis on corporate power and capital mobility, and absent effective demand-management and imbalance-correcting tools), has harmed many millions of people — in both developed and developing countries — and is now repressing growth, not stimulating it.  All the comparative advantage pontificating and CGE modeling in the world won’t magically convince people to deny their own lived reality: namely, that globalization is one reason (among others) why their economic prospects have visibly diminished over the last generation.

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