Description

Book Synopsis

Can sub-units within a capitalist democracy, even a relatively decentralized one like Canada, pursue fundamentally different social and economic policies? Is their ability to do so less now than it was before the advent of globalization? In Comparing Quebec and Ontario, Rodney Haddow brings these questions and the tools of comparative political economy to bear on the growing public policy divide between Ontario and Quebec.

Combining narrative case studies with rigorous quantitative analysis, Haddow analyses how budgeting, economic development, social assistance, and child care policies differ between the two provinces. The cause of the divide, he argues, are underlying differences between their political and economic institutions.

An important contribution to ongoing debates about globalization’s “golden straightjacket,” Comparing Quebec and Ontario is an essential resource for understanding Canadian political economy.



Trade Review
"If our century is a march to international corporatism and conformity, why do such vastly different societies thrive on opposite banks of the Ottawa River? In this book of dissent, political scientist Rodney Haddow of the University of Toronto documents the striking absence of anything resembling globalization in our own neighbourhood. It's a neat proposition." -- Holly Doan Blacklocks Reporter, January 17, 2016

Table of Contents
1. How Do Advanced Political Economies Differ? Why does it Matter? 2. Typing Provinces: The Political Economies of Ontario & Quebec 3. Budgeting: Why Some Tax & Spend More than Others, and How 4. Social Assistance & Transfers: Redistributing, but Differently 5. Child Care & Early Learning: Can the Residual Mould be Broken? 6. Economic Development: Can States Still Intervene? 7. Quantitative Evidence (1): Comparing Policy "Effort" 8. Quantitative Evidence (2): Comparing Redistributive Outcomes Conclusion: How Large and Durable are these Differences?

Comparing Quebec and Ontario

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    A Paperback by Rodney Haddow


      View other formats and editions of Comparing Quebec and Ontario by Rodney Haddow

      Publisher: University of Toronto Press
      Publication Date: 17/01/2015
      ISBN13: 9781442627017, 978-1442627017
      ISBN10:

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Can sub-units within a capitalist democracy, even a relatively decentralized one like Canada, pursue fundamentally different social and economic policies? Is their ability to do so less now than it was before the advent of globalization? In Comparing Quebec and Ontario, Rodney Haddow brings these questions and the tools of comparative political economy to bear on the growing public policy divide between Ontario and Quebec.

      Combining narrative case studies with rigorous quantitative analysis, Haddow analyses how budgeting, economic development, social assistance, and child care policies differ between the two provinces. The cause of the divide, he argues, are underlying differences between their political and economic institutions.

      An important contribution to ongoing debates about globalization’s “golden straightjacket,” Comparing Quebec and Ontario is an essential resource for understanding Canadian political economy.



      Trade Review
      "If our century is a march to international corporatism and conformity, why do such vastly different societies thrive on opposite banks of the Ottawa River? In this book of dissent, political scientist Rodney Haddow of the University of Toronto documents the striking absence of anything resembling globalization in our own neighbourhood. It's a neat proposition." -- Holly Doan Blacklocks Reporter, January 17, 2016

      Table of Contents
      1. How Do Advanced Political Economies Differ? Why does it Matter? 2. Typing Provinces: The Political Economies of Ontario & Quebec 3. Budgeting: Why Some Tax & Spend More than Others, and How 4. Social Assistance & Transfers: Redistributing, but Differently 5. Child Care & Early Learning: Can the Residual Mould be Broken? 6. Economic Development: Can States Still Intervene? 7. Quantitative Evidence (1): Comparing Policy "Effort" 8. Quantitative Evidence (2): Comparing Redistributive Outcomes Conclusion: How Large and Durable are these Differences?

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