In recent years, Alberta’s fiscal stance has shifted from large surpluses to deficits, and a large part of the blame appears to be due to rising public sector salaries. Since 2000, the province’s public sector wage bill has shot up by 119 percent — almost double the rate of growth in the rest of Canada. Wages, previously roughly at par with the rest of the country, are now higher (in many cases very substantially) across all public sector categories, including health care, social services, education and government, consuming 95 percent of the increase in provincial revenues over the past decade. At the same time, the number of public sector employees has grown faster than the overall population; it is difficult to attribute this sharp uptic...
Over the past two decades there has occurred a shift in economic power from central Canada to other ...
Defining a government by its finances is a tricky business. Adding to the complexity, governments ca...
Alberta historically has prided itself on its provincial tax advantage, and for good reason. With ab...
In recent years, Alberta’s fiscal stance has shifted from large surpluses to deficits, and a large p...
A year before the United Conservation Party was elected in Alberta, the final budget from the NDP go...
Abstract Quantile regressions are used to estimate the size of the public sector wage premium in Can...
We use a variety of methodologies to address how the public-private sector wage premium in Alberta c...
Abstract: Ontario public sector salary disclosure data is used to analyze trends from 1996 to 2010 a...
Alberta spent the better part of the last decade of the 20th century becoming the paragon of fiscal ...
ALBERTA GOVERNMENT PROGRAM SPENDING, ADJUSTED FOR INFLATION AND POPULATIONSince the mid-1990s, the g...
This paper analyzes Alberta’s fiscal problem in terms of the size of the current deficits and the gr...
From 1975 to 2007, Alberta’s real per capita government health expenditures grew from $1,679 to $3,6...
Alberta’s provincial government investment and capital stocks have followed a rather varied and unus...
The most direct mechanism by which labour productivity affects living standards is through real wage...
The fiscal adjustment that Alberta will have to undertake to put its budget on a sustainable path wa...
Over the past two decades there has occurred a shift in economic power from central Canada to other ...
Defining a government by its finances is a tricky business. Adding to the complexity, governments ca...
Alberta historically has prided itself on its provincial tax advantage, and for good reason. With ab...
In recent years, Alberta’s fiscal stance has shifted from large surpluses to deficits, and a large p...
A year before the United Conservation Party was elected in Alberta, the final budget from the NDP go...
Abstract Quantile regressions are used to estimate the size of the public sector wage premium in Can...
We use a variety of methodologies to address how the public-private sector wage premium in Alberta c...
Abstract: Ontario public sector salary disclosure data is used to analyze trends from 1996 to 2010 a...
Alberta spent the better part of the last decade of the 20th century becoming the paragon of fiscal ...
ALBERTA GOVERNMENT PROGRAM SPENDING, ADJUSTED FOR INFLATION AND POPULATIONSince the mid-1990s, the g...
This paper analyzes Alberta’s fiscal problem in terms of the size of the current deficits and the gr...
From 1975 to 2007, Alberta’s real per capita government health expenditures grew from $1,679 to $3,6...
Alberta’s provincial government investment and capital stocks have followed a rather varied and unus...
The most direct mechanism by which labour productivity affects living standards is through real wage...
The fiscal adjustment that Alberta will have to undertake to put its budget on a sustainable path wa...
Over the past two decades there has occurred a shift in economic power from central Canada to other ...
Defining a government by its finances is a tricky business. Adding to the complexity, governments ca...
Alberta historically has prided itself on its provincial tax advantage, and for good reason. With ab...