Northern Ontario and
New Brunswick are similar in population size and face similar economic
challenges given their rapidly aging populations and slow population growth. However, with its provincial status, New Brunswick
is often able to attract considerably more attention for its predicament as
opposed to Ontario’s north whose issues are essentially buried within a much
larger population focused
on the GTA.Indeed, a spate of stories
over the years have noted New Brunswick’s declining
birth rate, its outmigration,
and its shrinking
population.
It is now common
knowledge that northern Ontario’s population is aging
at a more rapid rate than the rest of Ontario and that its population growth
now rests on its Aboriginal population which is both younger and faster growing
than the rest of the population.Indeed,
the 2016 Census showed that population was actually increasing in some northern
Ontario Districts and attributable to the rising aboriginal population.Given the projected labour
shortages for northern Ontario that have been forecast as a
result of an aging population and outmigration, it stands to reason that the
Aboriginal population will have to play an increasingly important role in
filling positions.
This role for the
growing Aboriginal population has not only been noted for northern Ontario but
for Canada as a whole which also faces the prospect of labour shortages given
that nearly 20 percent of current employment is filled by those aged 55 years
and older and the decline in labour participation rates particularly among
those aged 15 to 24.In his remarks made
as part of the David
Dodge Lecture in Public Finance at Queen’s University last spring, Bank of
Canada Governor Stephen Poloz noted that: “Employment rates among indigenous
peoples—one of the youngest demographic groups in Canada—remain well below
those of the rest of the country.”
This is the challenge,
not only for northern Ontario but for Canada as a whole.For employment rates among our Aboriginal
population to go up, they need to increase their participation rates and as the
accompanying figure illustrates – there is much work to be done.Figure 1 shows that the labour force
participation rate for the Aboriginal population over the period 2007 to 2017
has remained consistently below that of the total population.The average labour force participation over
this period for the total population for those aged 15 to 64 is 78 percent
compared 64 percent for the aboriginal population.Figure 2 shows that a consistent gap also is
present for the employment rate for those aged 15 to 64 which averaged 72
percent for the total population but 61 percent for the aboriginal population.
Needless to say, this
national situation is invariably also a feature of the northern Ontario economy
and the challenge for 2019 should be to take further steps to devise a strategy to
increase the labour force participation and employment rates of the Aboriginal
population.The first step is increasing human capital and training. While this is probably easier for Aboriginal populations closer to major northern Ontario urban centers, we also need to do better in the case of more remote populations also. Our region’s economic future
depends on our getting this right.
Well, it
has been a breath-taking week in international affairs and the best indicator
yet that so to speak, “Toto, we’re not in Kansas anymore.” By acting on a US legal
request to arrest for extradition Huawei CFO Meng
Wanzhou, Canada has earned an over the top response from China that to date
has also been accompanied by the arrest of two Canadians in China on “national
security” concerns.The response of the
Chinese government and media includes words like “revenge” and “heavy price”
with respect to what Canada will face if Meng Wanzhou is not ultimately released.This all comes at a time when China’s economy
is increasingly seen as a source of opportunity for Canada with a desire to
boost trade via sectoral agreements.
And to top
it all off, President Trump has basically made Canada look like the ultimate
puppet state by arguing that he could intervene
in the dispute and let Meng Wanzhou off the hook if it was useful in
securing trade
concessions from China.The Rule
Breaker in Chief has made it apparent that he is just fine without a rules-based
international order.There really is
very little that seems to distinguish the tenor of the President’s behaviour
from that of other authoritarian leaders around the world.God bless America for a constitution that has
a division of powers and checks and balances for otherwise all of this could be
much worse – as hard as that might be to believe.
It goes
without saying that it is becoming an increasingly difficult time for a small
open economy on the world stage.Over
the last year, the NAFTA negotiations with the United States and Mexico
involved public insults directed at Canada’s leadership while Saudi Arabia had
a major tantrum over our views on human rights issues.Even if Canada had done a better job of
politically tiptoeing around these assorted landmines, it remains that we would still get
bullied because we are viewed as small and not of sufficient consequence.Even China’s recent diatribes against us are
really directed at the United States given that they can send it a message by targeting
what they obviously perceive to be its “vassal” state.So much for their respect for us.
While China
undoubtedly has some
valid points in this diplomatic dispute as expressed by its Ambassador to
Canada in a recent Globe opinion piece, it remains that its behaviour is reflective
of an insecure adolescent on the world stage.When a country of 1.3 billion people that claims to be an up and coming world
superpower unleashes such an stream of invective and vitriol on a small country
of 37 million people, one does not see an injured party but a bully.Only a bully terrorizes the small fry while treading
lightly with the bigger kids.
So where is
this going next?Well, it is unfortunate
Canada cannot seriously consider getting a membership with the European Union because
quite frankly, it has become a pretty friendless world.We can’t even rely much on our Anglosphere
friends because Australia and New Zealand are small like us while the United
States is on a world disorder frenzy and the British are busy immolating themselves
over Brexit.So, we are on our own.
We need to
do what we do best.Remain polite and
play the hand that we have been dealt as best we can and ride out the storm.Weather analogies are good - we can't control the weather, we only deal with it and Canadians are used to dealing with bad weather. We need to reach out to the Chinese at a
senior level and reassure them that we are doing everything we can to resolve
this issue in a fair, responsible and rules based manner.We need to reach out to the Americans and ask
for reassurance that this is not just a trade manoeuvre and request that this
matter be dealt with expeditiously.If
anything, we might want to try and bring the two sides together to seek a
diplomatic solution though given the rhetoric to date we would risk getting
side swiped by both sides.
In the end,
this will get resolved and life will go on. Indeed, President Trump’s own words provide
the best excuse for us releasing Meng Wanzhou immediately – obviously, he
thinks the arrest is a trade bargaining chip and not a matter of national
security.If we were more opportunistic,
that is exactly what we would do and stick it to the Americans given that they
have no qualms about throwing us under the bus. However, we are polite and follow rules.
However,
once the dust has settled, we really need to re-evaluate and review our international
relationships – especially those involving the United States and China.In the case of the United States, given our
economic integration and the fact that they take 75 percent of our exports,
there is going to be little we can do except hope for the day when a new and
more reasonable administration takes the White House.We share a continent with the Americans and
not with China and that is that.They
can be bullies too when occasion warrants but our ties with them have been long
standing.In a sense, we are not caught
in the middle between China and the United States, we are with the US given our
shared history and geography.
As for
China, well that requires some more thought.Given mercurial and aggressive behaviour on the part of China when they
don’t get their way and their willingness to bully, we do need to be very
careful that we do not become as dependent on their economy as we have become
with the Americans.I’m not sure the
Chinese market is worth greater access to us given the potential costs to our
businesses and our sovereignty when China decides they are unhappy with us and
wish to punish us. Nobody likes being slapped around and if they do, you need
to either break off the relationship or minimize contact via a more structured
relationship. It’s a big world and there
are other customers for our wares.We
need to trade with countries that behave in a less vindictive manner when it
comes to international issues.
Thunder Bay’s
new City Council has been sworn in and the first meeting tonight will send
important signals on what the direction of the new council is as well as the
ability of new council members to work together and effectively make decisions.This is a process being repeated cross the
province as new municipal councils from Toronto to Dryden to Windsor begin
serving their terms.
Many often
feel the role of Council is to make decisions that do things – like boost the
city’s economy or cut costs.The reality
is that much of this can only be done indirectly.For example, the economic impact of City
Council is via its role in setting tax rates and tax policy as well as
providing strategic direction on what infrastructure and quality of life
investments can attract business.As for cutting costs, Council needs to follow
a process that involves its civil servants –administration - which administers
and delivers services.
True, City
Council approves all decisions but it is only after strategic direction is provided and the
alternatives have been produced and analyzed by the administration.If City Council wants to reduce expenditure
growth, it is not their role to decide what areas should be cut or restrained,
it is their role to select the target expenditure level or the desire to reduce
spending and then ask administration for their options on how to achieve
it.Having set the policy direction,
City Council then decides on the options provided by administration to pursue
in meeting the target.In brief, the
role of City Council is to select targets and then make decisions to meet those
targets based on the instruments provided by their civil servants.
Of course,
the automatic response to any such pontificating on the part of observers like myself
is that I am not a member of Council and if I feel I know so much I should walk
the walk and run for office. While I appreciate that elected office is an important calling and a tough job, my response
to that is on several levels. First, you should always be careful what you wish
for. Second, such a retort on the part of any politician is really designed to
stifle debate because given the number of people expressing opinions, how can
we all run for office and all serve on Council or as an MP? Third, as engaged
citizens and taxpayers we should contribute to debate and discussion and we all have skills that can serve the public in different way.There is no one size fits all standard for public service and we cannot all be elected politicians.
So, that
out of the way, the main challenges facing Thunder Bay over the next few years
appear to have been categorized by the Mayor in his address last
week: taxation, crime, the economy and infrastructure.I would broaden the “crime” category to general
“social fabric” given the interaction between crime, inequality and poverty but
fair enough.These are the categories
most in need of attention in Thunder Bay.Taxation of course is related to spending given that the municipal tax
levy is directly linked to the amount of spending.And, of course there are always issues that
will rear their head as a result from decisions made elsewhere – such as the
decision to legalize cannabis.
So the
issues on tap for the
first meeting tonight are whether to close Dease Pool or spend millions of
dollars in repairs (apparently $2.8 million more), changes in parking
regulations, a recycling contract
extension ($2.6 million more) and a report on the performance of the new Python 5000 pothole repair machine.Aside from the parking regulations, these issues
all ultimately may involve spending more money for one reason or another.Given that taxation rates are ultimately
linked to spending, tonight will provide a pretty good indication of what we
can expect from City Council with respect to tax rates in next year’s budget
process and the direction for the next four years.
In light of my recent
contributions on China’s economic performance which have appeared in The
Hill and on the Fraser
Institute Blog, I thought it might be useful to provide the figures which
underpin the longer-term analysis of their performance.The data I used is from the Angus
Maddison Database – the 2018 update – and the data is summarized in the
accompanying Figures 1 and 2.
Figure 1 plots total
real GDP from 1820 to 2016 in 2011 USD for the United States, the United Kingdom
and China.In 1820, China had a vastly
larger economy than either the US or the UK with a real GDP of $325 billion compared
to $69 billion for the UK or $21 billion for the USA.Indeed, for much of economic history, China
has always been the biggest economy in the world as a result of its massive
population.In 1820, China had a
population of 381 million people compared to 10 million for the United States
and 21 million for the UK.However, the
19th century was not kind to China and by 1870, China’s economy had
shrunk to $270 billion but it was still larger than the United States at $150
billion and the UK at $179 billion.
Total GDP of both the
US and the UK grew quickly as a result of late nineteenth century
industrialization with the US matching the UK in 1878 and then pulling ahead in
terms of total GDP.By 1887, the US economy
at $306 billion was larger than China at $274 billion and the UK at $228
billion.By the eve of the First World War
in 1913, the US economy at $791 billion was nearly twice the size of both the
UK and China at $368 billion and $344 billion respectively. In the period since
WWI, the United States grew rapidly and by the mid 1970s was over five times
the size of the UK economy and about five times larger than China’s economy.
China had a Communist
revolution in 1949 but economic performance in its aftermath - while substantial - was not as
robust when compared to the last forty years.From 1950 to 1975, China real GDP grows from $348 billion to $1.2
trillion – a tripling of output.However,
things for China really take off with the first economic reforms and liberalization
of the 1970s and from 1975 to 2016, its economy expands from $1.2 trillion to
$17.3 trillion.Over the 1975 to 2016
period, the US economy expanded from $5.6 trillion to 17.2 trillion while the
UK expanded from $1 trillion to $2.5 trillion.
In 2016, China
re-assumed its historical role as the world’s largest economy.Yet, as I pointed out in my oped pieces, this
is not the end of the story.Despite its
impressive and rapid economic growth in terms of total output, China still lags
when it comes to per capita output. As Figure 2 shows, over the entire 1820 to
2016 period, China has always had a lower per capita GDP than either the UK or
the US and the relative gap has not changed all that much despite the rapid
growth of the last 40 years.In 1820, per
capita GDP in China was about 26 percent that of the UK and 41 percent that of
the USA.By 1975, its per capita GDP was
7 percent that of the UK and 5 percent that of the United States.After the robust growth of the post 1975
period, by 2016 per capita Chinese GDP now stands at 34 percent that of the UK
and 24 percent that of the US.
So, China has done
very well but it still has a long way to go.Its rapid extensive growth masks the fact that large swaths of its
population are still quite poor.Its
economy is showing signs of economic
and political fragility given its aging population, large debt levels and
economic inequality and this has global
implications.Such fragility is probably
a reason for its more authoritarian turn in recent years under President Xi Jinping.After the rapid growth and improvement in
living standards of the last few decades, any economic slowdown may create a
politically volatile domestic mix of discontent.
Well, with all the
excitement about the Federal Fall Economic Statement yesterday, the release by
Statistics Canada of the 2017
homicide numbers flew in somewhat under the media radar.According to Statistics Canada, the homicides
in Canada hit its highest rate in almost a decade in 2017 with much of the
increase attributed to more firearm-related and gang-related incidents. The
firearm-related homicide rate increased 18 percent from 2016 to 0.72 per
100,000 population—the highest rate since 1992. Police reported 660 homicide
victims in Canada in 2017, 48 more than in 2016. The homicide rate rose 7
percent in 2017 to 1.80 victims per 100,000 population—the highest level since
2009.It would appear that the upward
increase in homicide rates was driven by British Columbia and Quebec.
What is also of
interest is the homicide rate by CMA for 2017 as shown in Figure 1.In 2017, the homicide rate per 100,000 ranged
from a high of 5.8 in Thunder Bay to a low of 0 in Saguenay.Greater Sudbury came in close to the bottom
at 0.61.The good news for Thunder Bay
is that the homicide rate for 2017 is down from 2016 when it stood at 6.62 per
100,000.The bad news is if one takes
the average homicide rates for all CMAs for the period 2006 to 2016 (see Figure
2) Thunder Bay also ranks the highest at
an average of 4.04 per 100,000, just ahead of Winnipeg at an average of 3.69. As for Sudbury, its homicide rate is up from last year - when it stood at zero - but given the rankings there does not seem to be that much to worry about there.
Needless to say, despite
an improvement in 2017 Thunder Bay still has work to do.