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Problems of Public Finance in the Prairie Provinces
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 November 2014
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“All economic problems which are concerned with overhead costs, whether those of the individual farm enterprise or those of communities or governmental bodies, are rendered active or quiescent by the fluctuations of net agricultural income.” Herein, lies the fundamental economic problem of the West. It is the purpose of this paper to examine provincial and municipal finance in the Prairie Provinces in the light of this fact, in an attempt to reveal some of the more important problems and possible lines of attack on them. The area designated as the Prairie Provinces, however, is not a unit with uniform geographic and economic characteristics. Therefore, the factors of diversity, as well as those of variability, constitute the background against which the problems of government finance should be examined. Since these factors are vital to a consideration of the problems, there must be some preliminary account of them.
The prairie economy is “exposed” to the fluctuations characteristic of a variable climate, of extreme specialization, and of dependence upon prices determined in world markets. The contrast between an almost exclusively agricultural and an agricultural-industrial region, sheltered by a kindly federal government, is most marked. The climatic and economic instability of the West has been thoroughly studied by Professor Mackintosh in two volumes in the series “Canadian Frontiers of Settlement”. The instability reflected in variable community income is highly significant, because it is the net income “which must carry the fixed charges of both the individual enterprise and the agricultural community at large”.
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- Information
- Canadian Journal of Economics and Political Science/Revue canadienne de economiques et science politique , Volume 3 , Issue 3 , August 1937 , pp. 355 - 369
- Copyright
- Copyright © Canadian Political Science Association 1937
References
1 Mackintosh, W. A., Economic Problems of the Prairie Provinces (Toronto, 1935), p. 32.Google Scholar
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10 Percentage Increase in Total and Per Capita Expenditures of All Provinces and the Prairie Provinces Between 1919 and 1929
11 Percentage Increase in Total and Per Capita Bonded Indebtedness of All Provinces and the Prairie Provinces Between 1919 and 1929
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