Bill Robson on BNN: Business investment is so low, we’re working harder but not seeing the benefit of it 3/3


This budget does nothing to help on that front, says Bill Robson, CEO, C.D. Howe Institute
Bill Robson on BNN: Increasing taxes on businesses is going to depress investment further Part 2/3


Somebody’s going to have to pay, either the business, the employees or the customers says, Bill Robson, CEO, C.D. Howe Institute.
Parisa Mahboubi – How to Improve Our Skilled Migrant Programs


Pharmacare bill offers too much ambiguity and too little ambition – The Hill Times
For decades, pharmacare has been a day late and a dollar short. How much did Bill C-64 change that?
Very few Canadians have no drug insurance, but a much larger number probably need more coverage. The lack of an integrated national drug system limits our ability to describe the unmet need, and this need is as important for that cohort as hospital and medical insurance is for everyone.
The new pharmacare bill, released Feb. 29, has “the aim of continuing to work toward the implementation of national universal pharmacare.” At the onset, it proposes universal, no-cost access to selected diabetes and contraception drugs and devices, along with work on a new national formulary, refinement of today’s bulk purchasing strategy,…
As the Bank of Canada resists rate cuts, is it falling behind the curve again? – Globe and Mail
The latest data (from February) indicate that the battle against inflation is almost over. Despite the encouraging inflation data, the Bank of Canada again held its policy rate at 5 percent on Wednesday. What gives? The bank, like many other central banks, was slow off the mark to raise rates as inflation took off. We worry it runs the risk of falling behind the curve again.
First, let’s examine why the bank might be hesitating to cut – the housing market and fiscal policy. Then, let’s examine why, in our view, that’s not enough.
Year-over-year headline inflation dropped inside the bank’s 1-3 percent range in January, and continued to fall in February, sitting at 2.8 percent. Core inflation, which strips out more volatile…
Bonnie Lysyk – Let’s Bring Full Spending Information into Budgets


Scenarios for Seniors’ Care: Future Challenges, Current Gaps and Strategies to Address Them


Tingting Zhang – Watch Out How Many STEM Workers We Are Admitting


Seniors’ Care Surge Will Require Smart Policies
Canada is facing a surging population of seniors, which is exacerbating demand for specialized seniors’ care amid constrained government financial resources, says a new report by the C.D. Howe Institute. We need smart policies now to increase supply of services…Jeremy Kronick on BNN – If the BoC waits too long to cut rates, it may fall behind the curve


Jeremy Kronick, Associate Vice President and director of the Centre on Financial and Monetary Policy, joins BNN Bloomberg to discuss the path for rate cuts in Canada, inflation and the fiscal policy.
Ten guides for grading next week’s federal budget – Financial Post
Canada’s fiscal situation is dire, with bloated spending, excessive borrowing and growth-stifling taxes. Canadians need a responsible federal budget — if not an A-grade fiscal plan, at least a solid B. It needs to do much better than the D we gave last fall’s fiscal statement.
Here are 10 guides we’ll be following in grading next week’s federal budget.
1. Timely release. On this one, a failing grade is already locked in. The budget arrives two weeks into the 2024-25 fiscal year for which it is supposedly the plan and six weeks after the Main Estimates. That means money is being spent without proper parliamentary scrutiny.
2. Cut the spin and give us the figures. Recent budgets have run several hundred pages, but…