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Canada, The Pace-Setting Economy

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  • Canada, The Pace-Setting Economy

    CANADA, THE PACE-SETTING ECONOMY
    NEIL REYNOLDS

    The Telegraph-Journal (New Brunswick)
    June 4, 2009 Thursday
    Canada

    The Wall Street Journal and the Washington-based Heritage Foundation
    think-tank publish an Index of Economic Freedom based on 10
    benchmarks - business freedom, financial freedom, trade freedom,
    fiscal freedom, investment freedom, monetary freedom, labor freedom,
    size of government, property rights and freedom from corruption.

    This year, using 2007 data, the index calculates a comprehensive
    score for 183 countries. The highest possible score is 100. North
    Korea, to cite the lowest grade, scores two - mostly getting on the
    scoreboard at all for accommodating the odd foreign investor. India,
    the democracy, finishes in 123rd place with a score of 54.4. China,
    the dictatorship, finishes in 132nd place with 53.2. Russia, the
    kleptocracy, finishes in 146th place with 50.8.

    In the top 10, Hong Kong finishes first, for the 15th consecutive
    year, with a score of 90.0. Singapore finishes in second place with
    87.1. The next eight countries are tightly bunched: Australia (82.6),
    Ireland (82.2), New Zealand (82.0); U.S., 80.7, Canada (80.5), Denmark
    (79.6), Switzerland (79.4) and the United Kingdom (79.0). Canada and
    the U.S. thus finish close to a tie - though U.S. momentum is downward
    (fiscal excess) and Canadian momentum upward (a trade agreement
    with Peru).

    In the 2009 index, the U.S. declined fractionally below its 2008
    score, by 0. 3 points. Canada gained fractionally, by 0.3 points. This
    divergence will increase. The 2010 Index will capture data from the
    beginning of the global meltdown; the 2011 Index will capture the
    radical interventions of U.S. President Barack Obama. The economists
    and editors of the index warn that the turbulent events of these
    years "could severely undermine economic freedoms [in the U.S.] in
    the future."

    In another international ranking of the same kind, the Washington-based
    Cato Institute's Economic Freedom of the World 2009 report used
    different benchmarks: personal choice, voluntary exchange, freedom to
    compete, security of property and sound money. (Seventy think-tanks
    from around the world participate in Cato's annual exercise, among
    them the Vancouver-based Fraser Institute.) In this ranking, the
    highest possible score is 10. In 1980, the global average for 141
    countries was 5.1; in 2009, 6.6 - a 30 per cent improvement.

    The top 10 countries rankings here come with two notable
    differences. Hong Kong (8.94), Singapore (8.8) and New Zealand
    (8.5) take the three top places. Switzerland (8.3) finishes fourth
    and the United Kingdom finishes fifth. Chile, however, takes sixth,
    becoming the first South American country ever to finish in the top
    10. And Canada finishes seventh - the first time that Canada (8.05)
    has finished ahead of the U.S., which tied with Australia (8.04)
    for eighth. Ireland (7.92) finishes 10th.

    In 2000, the Cato index put the U.S. in second place, trailing
    only Hong Kong. In 2008, it placed the U.S. toward the bottom of
    the pack. The authoritarian American approach to the global economic
    crisis will almost certainly knock the U.S. from the top 10 countries
    that have the best record of protecting economic freedoms.

    In placing Canada ahead of the U.S., the Cato index anticipated the
    downward slide of the U.S. - memorably noted last month by three
    economists who compared the performance of the two economies against
    six benchmarks.

    In their commentary, published in The Washington Post, Fraser Institute
    senior economists Jason Clemens and Niels Veldhuis and Cato Institute
    economist Chris Edwards noted that Canada - long dismissed by American
    conservatives as Banana Republic socialists - has "cast off the
    stereotypes." In essence, these economists suggested, Canada has
    already replaced the U.S. as the pace-setting North American economy.

    Spending: Government spending in Canada hit its highest level, at 53
    per cent of GDP, in the early 1990s. It has since fallen to 40 per
    cent. In the U.S. , on the other hand, government spending has risen,
    reaching 39 per cent in 2008 - a number, the three economist say,
    which is now likely to jump higher.

    Debt: Canada cut its debt from 71 per cent of GDP in 1995 to 32 per
    cent in 2008. U.S. federal debt will rise from 41 per cent of GDP in
    2008 to 60 per cent in 2010.

    Social Security: The Canadian Pension Plan is solvent. The U.S. program
    is vastly underfunded.

    Federalism: Canada has ceded power to the provinces. The U.S. is
    getting more centralized.

    Corporate taxes: Canada has cuts its corporate tax rate from 28 per
    cent to 15 per cent and the provinces are moving to cut theirs. The
    U.S. is increasing corporate taxes.

    Individual taxes: Canadian personal rates have moved down. U.S. rates
    will move higher (when the George W. Bush tax cuts expire in 2010).

    Clemens, Veldhuis and Edwards suggest that the Democrats, who
    now control Congress, would do well to copy the "socialists" to
    the north. If so, they might avert the embarrassment (among other
    consequences) that goes with a Banana Republic economy.

    In the 2009 Index of Economic Freedom, the U.S. runs 10 points behind
    the leader (Hong Kong). If the U.S. fell a further 10 points, it would
    tie with Armenia in 30th place. This is no proper place for the United
    States, for so long - however imperfect - the land of the free.
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